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PARKINSON’S DISEASE Diagnosis & Treatment Options University of South Carolina School of Medicine March 27, 2014 Dale R.Hamrick, MD PO Box 23656 Columbia, SC 29224 (803) 422-2985
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Cardinal Characteristics Resting tremor Bradykinesia Rigidity Postural instability
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Beware the Old Man (or woman) Difficulty initiating movement (akinesia) Small amplitude movements (hypokinesia) Reduced motor velocity (bradykinesia) Loss of postural reflexes Stooped body posture
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Additional Signs & Symptoms Micrographia Masked face Slowing of ADLs Stooped, shuffling gait Decreased arm swing when walking
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Additional Signs and Symptoms Difficulty arising from a chair Difficulty turning in bed Hypophonic speech
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Non-Motor Symptoms Neuropsychiatric Depression Anhedonia Attention deficit Hallucinations Delusions Obsessional behavior Cognitive disorder Sleep disorders Restless legs Periodic limb movements REM behavior disorder Excessive daytime somnolence Vivid dreaming Non-REM sleep-related movement disorders Insomnia
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Non-Motor Symptoms Autonomic symptoms Bladder urgency, nocturia, frequency Sweating Orthostatic hypotension Hypersexuality Erectile impotence hypotestosterone state GI symptoms Sialorrhea Ageusia Dysphagia Reflux Vomiting Nausea Constipation Fecal incontinence
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Non-Motor Symptoms Sensory Pain Paresthesia Olfactory disturbance Other Fatigue Diplopia Blurred vision Seborrhea Weight loss
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Epidemiology Incidence 5-24/ 10 5 worldwide (USA: 20.5/10 5 ) Incidence of PS/PD rising slowly with aging population Prevalence 57-371/10 5 worldwide (USA/Canada 300/10 5 ) 35%-42% of cases undiagnosed at any time Onset mean PS 61.6 years; PD 62.4 years rare before age 30; 4-10% cases before age 40
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What Happened?
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Mortality in PS Reduced life expectancy Mean survival after onset ~ 15 years longer in non-demented PD cases longer with L-dopa use PD survival >MSA, PSP The most common causes of death: pulmonary infection/aspiration, urinary tract infection, pulmonary embolism and complications of falls and fractures
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Atypical Parkinsonism Early onset of, or rapidly progressing, dementia Rapidly progressive course Supranuclear gaze palsy Upper motor neuron signs Cerebellar signs—dysmetria, ataxia Urinary incontinence Early symptomatic postural hypotension
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Progressive supranuclear palsy Supranuclear downgaze palsy, square wave jerks Upright posture/frequent falls Pseudobulbar emotionality Furrowed brow/stare
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Corticobasal degeneration Unilateral, coarse tremor Limb apraxia/limb dystonia/alien limb
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Multiple system atrophy Shy-Drager syndrome Autonomic insufficiency—orthostasis, impotence Striatonigral degeneration Tremor less prominent Olivopontocerebellar atrophy Cerebellar signs
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Diffuse Lewy Body Disease Early onset of dementia Delusions and hallucinations Agitation Alzheimer’s disease Dementia is the primary clinical syndrome Rest tremor is rare
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Hydrocephalus-induced Parkinsonism Normal pressure hydrocephalus Clinical triad: parkinsonism/gait disorder urinary/fecal incontinence dementia
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Drug Classes in PD Dopaminergic agents Levodopa Dopamine agonists COMT inhibitors MAO-B inhibitors Anticholinergics Amantadine
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Levodopa Most effective drug for parkinsonian symptoms First developed in the late 1960s; rapidly became the drug of choice for PD Large neutral amino acid; requires active transport across the gut and blood-brain barriers
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Levodopa (cont’d) Rapid peripheral decarboxylation to dopamine without a decarboxylase inhibitor (DCIs: carbidopa, benserazide) Side effects: nausea, postural hypotension, dyskinesias, motor fluctuations
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Amantadine Antiviral agent; PD benefit found accidentally Tremor, bradykinesia, rigidity & dyskinesias Exact mechanism unknown; possibly: enhancing release of stored dopamine inhibiting presynaptic reuptake of catecholamines dopamine receptor agonism NMDA receptor blockade Side effects —autonomic, psychiatric 200-300 mg/day
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Treatment Options Preventive treatment No definitive treatment available Symptomatic treatment Pharmacological Surgical Non-motor management Restorative—experimental only Transplantation Neurotrophic factors
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Levodopa-Induced Dyskinesias Most common is “peak dose” dyskinesia disappears with dose reduction Choreiform, ballistic and dystonic movements Most patients prefer some dyskinesias over the alternative of akinesia and rigidity
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COMT Inhibitors Newest class of antiparkinsonian drugs: tolcapone, entacapone Potentiate LD: prevent peripheral degradation by inhibiting catechol O-methyl transferase Reduces LD dose necessary for a given clinical effect
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COMT Inhibitors (cont’d) Helpful for both early and fluctuating Parkinson’s disease May be particularly useful for patients with “brittle” PD, who fluctuate between off and on states frequently throughout the day
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Dopamine Agonists: Distinguishing Features Directly stimulate dopamine receptors No competition with dietary amino acids Longer half-life than levodopa Monotherapy or adjunct therapy May delay or reduce motor fluctuations & dyskinesias associated with levodopa May be neuroprotective “The Patch” – rotigotine (Neupro)
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DAs: Common Adverse Effects Nausea, vomiting Dizziness, postural hypotension Headache Drowsiness & somnolence Dyskinesias Confusion, hallucinations, paranoia
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Clinical Decision-Making in Early PD Disease severity degree of functional impairment impact on quality of life Age of patient comorbidities risk of acute drug intolerance risk of long-term complications Neuroprotection
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Initial Therapy: The Elderly Patient Shorter treatment horizon Lower risk of long-term complications Higher likelihood of comorbidities Carbidopa/Levodopa: well tolerated, effective Use adjunctive medications cautiously Avoid sedating medications
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Initial Therapy: The Young Patient Long-term treatment horizon Increased risk of long-term complications Increased patient responsibilities Dopamine agonist monotherapy Levodopa-sparing strategies Putative neuroprotective strategies Role of levodopa is not adequately defined
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Levodopa: Guidelines in Early PD Start low and increase slowly Titrate dosage to efficacy (~200-600 mg/day) Immediate release Controlled release Acute side effects: nausea, dizziness, somnolence
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Managing Early Complications: Wearing Off/Mild Dyskinesia For pts on DA monotherapy: elevate dosage of agonist add LD, w/ or w/o COMT inhibitor For pts on LD: add DA, COMT inhibitor, or MAO inhibitor reduce LD dosage use combination of immediate and CR
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Managing Early Complications: Altered Mental States Confusion, sedation, dizziness, hallucinations, delusions Reduce or eliminate CNS-active drugs of lesser priority anticholinergics – sedatives amantadine – muscle relaxants hypnotics – urinary spasmodics Reduce dosage of DA, COMT inhibitor, or LD
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Surgical Treatments for Parkinson’s Disease Ablative thalamotomy pallidotomy Electrical stimulation VIM thalamus, globus pallidus internus, sub-thalamic nucleus Transplant autologous adrenal, human fetal, xenotransplants, genetically engineered transplants
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Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) High frequency, pulsatile, bipolar electrical stimulation Stereotactically placed into target nucleus Exact physiology unknown, but higher frequencies mimic cellular ablation, not stimulation
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Psycho-Social Aspects of Parkinson's disease Chronic, progressive, incurable Off the wall cures Depression (like stroke, assume they all are depressed) Housing – the move to the NH Children and their fears Resuscitation issues Artificial nutrition issues
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Other Parkinson’s Meds MAO Inhibitors rasagaline selegilene zydis carbidopa/levodopa rotigotine patch
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Hoehn and Yahr Staging 1. Unilateral disease only 2. Bilateral mild disease, with or without axial involvement 3. Mild-to-moderate bilateral disease, with first signs of deteriorating balance 4. Severe disease requiring considerable assistance 5. Confinement to wheelchair or bed unless aided
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