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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

PARKINSON’S DISEASE

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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. Cardinal Characteristics. Resting tremor Bradykinesia Rigidity Postural instability. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: PARKINSON’S DISEASE

PARKINSON’S DISEASEDiagnosis & Treatment Options

University of South CarolinaSchool of Medicine

March 27, 2014

Dale R.Hamrick, MDPO 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 reflexesStooped body posture

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Additional Signs & SymptomsMicrographia

Masked face

Slowing of ADLs

Stooped, shuffling gait

Decreased arm swing when walking

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Additional Signs and SymptomsDifficulty arising from a chair

Difficulty turning in bed

Hypophonic speech

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Non-Motor SymptomsNeuropsychiatric

DepressionAnhedoniaAttention deficitHallucinationsDelusionsObsessional behaviorCognitive disorder

Sleep disordersRestless legsPeriodic limb

movementsREM behavior disorderExcessive daytime

somnolenceVivid dreamingNon-REM sleep-related

movement disordersInsomnia

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Non-Motor SymptomsAutonomic symptoms

Bladder urgency, nocturia, frequency

SweatingOrthostatic hypotensionHypersexualityErectile impotence

hypotestosterone state

GI symptomsSialorrheaAgeusiaDysphagiaRefluxVomitingNauseaConstipationFecal incontinence

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Non-Motor SymptomsSensory

PainParesthesiaOlfactory disturbance

OtherFatigueDiplopiaBlurred visionSeborrheaWeight loss

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Epidemiology Incidence

5-24/ 105 worldwide (USA: 20.5/105)Incidence of PS/PD rising slowly with aging

populationPrevalence

57-371/105 worldwide (USA/Canada 300/105)35%-42% of cases undiagnosed at any time

Onsetmean PS 61.6 years; PD 62.4 yearsrare before age 30; 4-10% cases before age 40

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What Happened?

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Mortality in PSReduced life expectancy

Mean survival after onset ~ 15 yearslonger in non-demented PD caseslonger with L-dopa use

PD survival >MSA, PSPThe most common causes of death:

pulmonary infection/aspiration, urinary tract infection, pulmonary embolism and complications of falls and fractures

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Atypical ParkinsonismEarly onset of, or rapidly progressing,

dementiaRapidly progressive courseSupranuclear gaze palsyUpper motor neuron signsCerebellar signs—dysmetria, ataxiaUrinary incontinenceEarly symptomatic postural hypotension

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Progressive supranuclear palsySupranuclear downgaze palsy, square wave

jerksUpright posture/frequent fallsPseudobulbar emotionalityFurrowed brow/stare

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Corticobasal degenerationUnilateral, coarse tremorLimb apraxia/limb dystonia/alien limb

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Multiple system atrophyShy-Drager syndrome

Autonomic insufficiency—orthostasis, impotenceStriatonigral degeneration

Tremor less prominentOlivopontocerebellar atrophy

Cerebellar signs

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Diffuse Lewy Body DiseaseEarly onset of dementiaDelusions and hallucinationsAgitation

Alzheimer’s diseaseDementia is the primary clinical syndromeRest tremor is rare

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Hydrocephalus-induced ParkinsonismNormal pressure hydrocephalusClinical triad:

parkinsonism/gait disorderurinary/fecal incontinencedementia

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Drug Classes in PDDopaminergic agents

LevodopaDopamine agonists

COMT inhibitors MAO-B inhibitorsAnticholinergicsAmantadine

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LevodopaMost effective drug for parkinsonian

symptomsFirst developed in the late 1960s; rapidly

became the drug of choice for PDLarge 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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AmantadineAntiviral agent; PD benefit found accidentallyTremor, bradykinesia, rigidity & dyskinesiasExact mechanism unknown; possibly:

enhancing release of stored dopamineinhibiting presynaptic reuptake of

catecholaminesdopamine receptor agonismNMDA receptor blockade

Side effects —autonomic, psychiatric200-300 mg/day

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Treatment OptionsPreventive treatment

No definitive treatment availableSymptomatic treatment

PharmacologicalSurgical

Non-motor managementRestorative—experimental only

TransplantationNeurotrophic factors

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Levodopa-Induced DyskinesiasMost common is “peak dose” dyskinesia

disappears with dose reductionChoreiform, ballistic and dystonic movementsMost patients prefer some dyskinesias over

the alternative of akinesia and rigidity

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COMT InhibitorsNewest class of antiparkinsonian drugs:

tolcapone, entacaponePotentiate 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 diseaseMay 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 FeaturesDirectly stimulate dopamine receptorsNo competition with dietary amino acidsLonger half-life than levodopaMonotherapy or adjunct therapyMay delay or reduce motor fluctuations &

dyskinesias associated with levodopaMay be neuroprotective“The Patch” – rotigotine (Neupro)

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DAs: Common Adverse EffectsNausea, vomitingDizziness, postural hypotensionHeadacheDrowsiness & somnolenceDyskinesiasConfusion, hallucinations, paranoia

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Clinical Decision-Making in Early PDDisease severity

degree of functional impairmentimpact on quality of life

Age of patientcomorbiditiesrisk of acute drug intolerancerisk of long-term complications

Neuroprotection

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Initial Therapy: The Elderly PatientShorter treatment horizonLower risk of long-term complicationsHigher likelihood of comorbiditiesCarbidopa/Levodopa: well tolerated, effectiveUse adjunctive medications cautiouslyAvoid sedating medications

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Initial Therapy: The Young PatientLong-term treatment horizonIncreased risk of long-term complicationsIncreased patient responsibilitiesDopamine agonist monotherapyLevodopa-sparing strategiesPutative neuroprotective strategiesRole of levodopa is not adequately defined

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Levodopa: Guidelines in Early PDStart low and increase slowlyTitrate dosage to efficacy (~200-600 mg/day)Immediate releaseControlled releaseAcute side effects: nausea, dizziness,

somnolence

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Managing Early Complications: Wearing Off/Mild DyskinesiaFor pts on DA monotherapy:

elevate dosage of agonistadd LD, w/ or w/o COMT inhibitor

For pts on LD:add DA, COMT inhibitor, or MAO inhibitorreduce LD dosageuse combination of immediate and CR

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Managing Early Complications: Altered Mental StatesConfusion, sedation, dizziness, hallucinations,

delusionsReduce or eliminate CNS-active drugs of

lesser priorityanticholinergics – sedativesamantadine – muscle relaxantshypnotics – urinary spasmodics

Reduce dosage of DA, COMT inhibitor, or LD

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Surgical Treatments for Parkinson’s DiseaseAblative

thalamotomypallidotomy

Electrical stimulationVIM thalamus, globus pallidus internus, sub-

thalamic nucleusTransplant

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 diseaseChronic, progressive,

incurableOff the wall curesDepression (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 Inhibitorsrasagaline selegilene

zydis carbidopa/levodopa

rotigotine patch

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Hoehn and Yahr Staging

1. Unilateral disease only2. 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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