Parkinson's Flashcards

1
Q

What is the classic triad of Parkinson’s disease?

A

Akinesia
Rigidity
Tremor

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2
Q

What is the pathology of Parkinson’s?

A

Destruction of dopaminergic neurones
Projecting from substantia Nigra (midbrain) to striatum of basal ganglia (caudate nucleus and putamen)
Leads to imbalance in favour of cholinergic and other neutotransmitter mechanisms

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3
Q

When do symptoms appear in PD?

A

When about 60-80% of nigrostriate dopaminergic neurones have been lost

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4
Q

Describe akinesia in PD

A
Bradykinesia - slowing down, particularly with complex motor tasks
Lack of spontaneous movement:
Poverty of facial expression
Difficulty changing position
Quiet and monotonous speech
Abnormal gait and stance
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5
Q

What is the gait like in PD?

A

Flexed / stooped posture
Initiation of walking and turning are difficult
Shuffling gait

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6
Q

Describe rigidity in PD

A

Lead-pipe rigidity. Constant throughout ROM

Cogwheel rigidity is a consequence of tremor superimposed on background of lead pipe rigidity

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7
Q

Describe the tremor of Parkinson’s disease

A
Mainly affects hands
Pill rolling
Present at rest
Exacerbated by anxiety or stress
Improves on action, may disappear
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8
Q

How may cranial nerves be affected in Parkinson’s?

A

Mild impairment of upgaze
Eyelids may be tremulous
Glabellar tap sign: repeated taps to forehead. In normal people, reflex blinking rapidly fatigues but this doesn’t happen in PD

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9
Q

What are the non-motor symptoms of PD?

A
Depression
Hallucinations - visual
Psychosis
Dementia
Sleep disorders: insomnia
Autonomic: constipation, bladder disturbance, erectile dysfunction, postural hypotension
Anosmia
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10
Q

How is Parkinson’s diagnosed?

A

Clinical

Response to treatment used to distinguish between PD and other akinetic-rigid syndromes

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11
Q

How does Levodopa work?

A

Natural substrate for dopamine synthesis

L-dopa can cross the blood brain barrier

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12
Q

How is Levodopa given?

A

In combination with a DOPA de carboxylate inhibitor
To prevent peripheral breakdown of L-dopa
Also reduces side effects
E.g. Co-careldopa (sinemet)

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13
Q

What are the side effects or co-careldopa?

A

Postural hypotension
Confusion
Hallucinations
Delusions

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14
Q

What is Madopar?

A

Co-beneldopa

L-dopa + DOPA de carboxylase inhibitor

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15
Q

What are the complications of long-term L-dopa therapy?

A

Motor fluctuations - wearing off
On-off
Dyskinesias - involuntary movements occurring in association with drug treatment

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16
Q

How can long-term complications of L-dopa be minimised?

A

Frequent small doses
Controlled release preparations
Combined use with MAO-B inhibitors or COMT inhibitors
Continuous administration e.g. Transdermal patches

17
Q

How does L-dopa use change with time?

A

Increases as the effects decrease

This means more side-effects

18
Q

What are Rotigotine and Ropinirole?

A

Dopamine agonists

19
Q

What are the side effects of dopamine agonists?

A

Drowsiness
Nausea
Hallucinations
Compulsive behaviour

20
Q

What is apomorphine and how is it used?

A

Potent DA agonist
Used as continuous SC infusion
Or as rescue pen for sudden freezing

21
Q

Name an MAO-B inhibitor

A

Selegeline

Rasagiline

22
Q

What classes of drugs can cause Parkinsonism?

A

Neuroleptics
Metoclopramide
Prochlorperazine