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Parkinson

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Parkinson s Disease AIMGP Seminar Prepared by: Ilan Lenga and Nicolas Szecket – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Parkinson


1
Parkinsons Disease
  • AIMGP Seminar
  • Prepared by Ilan Lenga and Nicolas Szecket

2
References
  • NEJM Review Articles
  • Parkinsons Disease Part One October 8, 1998
  • Parkinsons Disease Part Two October 15, 1998
  • UpToDate Vol 10.2
  • Treatment Guidelines by the American Academy of
    Neurology. Neurology 50(3) Suppl3. 1998.
  • Principles of Neural Science, Third edition

3
Case
  • Mr JP is a 63 yo male, school teacher
  • Gradual development of right hand resting tremor
    over last 6 months
  • Also describes difficulty getting going, and
    feeling unsteady on my feet
  • He has had no falls
  • His symptoms are not interfering with his job or
    ADLs

4
Case
  • No sensory or motor symptoms
  • No cognitive symptoms
  • No bowel/bladder symptoms
  • No significant past medical Hx
  • No EtOH or other drugs

5
Case
  • O/E
  • Vitals normal, no postural change
  • General physical exam unremarkable
  • Neuro
  • asymmetrical right handed tremor 4-6 Hz
  • Normal CN exam
  • Normal bulk, strength, DTRs
  • Mild increased tone, cogwheeling of R wrist
  • Normal sensory and cerebellar exam
  • Gait unremarkable
  • Folstein 30/30

6
Question
  • Does this man have Parkinsons Disease?

7
  • .Involuntary tremulous motion, with lessened
    muscular power, in parts not in action and even
    when supported with a propensity to bend the
    trunk forwards, and to pass from a walking to a
    running pace, the senses and intellects being
    uninjured.
  • James Parkinson, 1817

8
Features of PD
  • T Tremor
  • Classic pill-rolling or pronation/supination
    tremor is 4 - 6 Hz, usually upper limb (75 of
    pts). Brought out by distraction. Decreased with
    movement of limbs
  • R Rigidity
  • Lead-pipe or cogwheel, tone usually slightly more
    in flexors than extensors
  • A Akinesia
  • slowness of movement (bradykinesia), poverty of
    movement (facial amimia, arm swing),difficulty
    initiating movement
  • P Postural Instability
  • impaired corrective postural reflexes(early),
    progresses to more upper trunk instability with
    fall risk

9
Most Distinctive Signs of Idiopathic Parkinsons
Disease
  • Asymmetrical Resting Tremor
  • Dementia not an early feature
  • Normal Strength
  • Excellent initial response to L-dopa

10
DDx
  • Parkinsonism Plus
  • Diffuse Lewy Body Dementia
  • Progressive Supranuclear Palsy
  • Multi-System Atrophy
  • Shy-Drager
  • Striatonigral Degeneration
  • Olivopontocerebellar atrophy
  • Corticobasal Degeneration

11
DDx
  • Drug-induced
  • Vascular
  • Toxins
  • CO, methanol, manganese, MPTP
  • Post-infectious (Postencephalitis lethargica)
  • Paraneoplastic/tumour
  • Trauma

12
Question
  • His symptoms are relatively mild, what measures
    would you institute now?

Non-Pharmacological ?Neuroprotection?
13
Non-Pharmacological
  • Group Support for Patient Family
  • Education
  • Parkinsons Foundation of Canada www.wemove.org
  • Physiotherapy
  • Exercise is critical to maintaining health
  • Occupational Therapy
  • Patients acquire numerous disabilities require
    assistance with many ADLs
  • Speech-Language Pathology
  • Speech and swallowing difficulties
    develop/intensify over course of disease

14
Neuroprotection?
  • Selegiline
  • MAO-B inhibitor
  • Blocks formation of free radicals derived from
    the oxidative metabolism of Dopamine
  • Able to protect mice from the effects of MPTP
    (drug-induced PD)
  • RCTs have shown that selegiline delays
    disability and appears to slow the progression of
    symptoms in previously untreated PD.
  • Whether this means it is truly neuroprotective
    is still being clarified

15
Case
  • JP and his wife join a support group, and you
    start him on Selegiline 5mg BID
  • You follow him in clinic
  • Over the next 6 months, his symptoms are stable,
    but then his akinesia and rigidity begin to
    progress. He has almost fallen once.
  • His symptoms are now interfering significantly
    with his job

16
Questions
  • Would you initiate therapy now?
  • What are the options?

17
Goals of Therapy
  • Symptomatic improvement
  • Maximizing quality of life
  • Possibly prolonging survival

18
Symptomatic Pharmacological Rx
  • Levodopa
  • Dopamine Agonists
  • Anticholinergics
  • Amantadine

19
Levodopa
  • The cornerstone of PD therapy
  • Most effective agent available
  • Precursor to Dopamine
  • Can cross blood brain barrier (dopamine cant)
  • Peripheral metabolism leads to side-effects -
    nausea, vomiting, orthostasis
  • Carbidopa, a peripheral decarboxylase inhibitor,
    decreases peripheral metabolism

20
Levodopa
  • Sinemet
  • 100/25
  • 200/25
  • 200/50
  • 250/50
  • Goal is lowest dose required - at start, usually
    300-600mg/day, titrate up to 1g/d
  • Take on empty stomach, because absorption
    competes with amino acids

Carbidopa
L-Dopa
21
Levodopa
  • Disadvantages
  • 50 of patients within 5 years of Rx develop
    L-dopa induced motor complications (stay tuned to
    the case)
  • Neuropsychiatric problems - confusion, psychosis
  • Theoretical concerns about accelerating disease
    due to oxidative damage to neurons

22
Dopamine Agonists
  • Act directly on striatal dopamine receptors
    without synaptic uptake/release or metabolic
    conversion
  • Used as an L-dopa sparing strategy
  • Bromocriptine and Pergolide most common
  • Start slowly and increase gradually
  • Side effects include orthostasis, nausea,
    vomiting, hallucinations, peripheral
    vasoconstriction, and rarely pleuro/retroperitonea
    l fibrosis

23
Anticholinergics
24
Anticholinergics
  • Restores balance between Dopamine and ACh in the
    brain
  • Benztropine and trihexyphenidyl (Artane) most
    common
  • Not well tolerated due to side effects
  • mydriasis, dry mouth, impaired sweating, urinary
    retention, constipation, delirium
  • Used primarily for refractory tremor and
    sialorrhea

25
Amantadine
  • Mechanism of action unclear
  • Short term benefit, not sustained beyond 6 - 12
    months
  • Side effects include ankle edema, insomnia,
    nightmares, confusion, hallucinations, and
    anticholinergic effects
  • Most effective for tremor, some activity against
    akinesia and rigidity

26
Summary of Main Effects
  • Drug
  • L-dopa
  • Dopamine Agonist
  • Anticholinergic
  • Amantadine
  • Tremor
  • poor
  • poor
  • good
  • good

Rigidity/Akinesia excellent good poor poor
27
A excellent, detailed, table of drugs, dosages
and side effects. A recommended reference. NEJM
Oct 15, 1998
28
Case
  • You elect to start him on Sinemet, on a dose of
    100/25 TID
  • His symptoms markedly improve
  • He is left with a mild R hand tremor, but
    otherwise returns to excellent function

29
Case
  • You follow Mr. JP over the next 4 years
  • He requires gradual titration of his Sinemet up
    to a current dose of 250/50 TID
  • He now comes in complaining that he is developing
    rigidity and freezing 30-60 minutes before each
    dose

30
Questions
  • Whats going on?
  • What can you do for him?

31
Wearing Off Effect
  • As PD progresses dopaminergic nerve terminals
    degenerate and cannot store and release dopamine
    well
  • The result is more dependence on plasma L-dopa
    levels
  • L-dopa has a T1/2 of 1.3hrs, thus adequate levels
    are only maintained for up to 4 hours

32
Treatment Options
  • Shorten dosing interval
  • Sinemet CR (requires 30 increase in dose due to
    lower absorption)
  • Add Dopamine Agonist
  • Catechol-O-methyl transferase (COMT) inhibitor

33
COMT Inhibitor
  • Tolcapone and entacapone
  • prevent metabolism of L-dopa
  • increase T1/2 of L-dopa, stabilizing plasma
    levels
  • Side-effects due to increased L-dopa, diarrhea
    (severe in 5), rare hepatotoxicity

34
Case
  • You switch Mr. JP to Sinemet CR with only modest
    improvement
  • Ultimately he responses to tolcapone 100mg TID

35
Case
  • 4 months later he begins to describe fluctuations
    between being on (responding to meds) and off
    (parkinsonian)
  • Also he notes occasional involuntary movements
    during on periods and painful leg muscle
    spasms during off periods particularly in the
    early morning

36
Questions
  • What is happening?
  • Can anything be done?

37
Complications of L-dopa Rx
  • Motor Fluctuations
  • wearing off effect
  • on-off phenomenon, rapid/unpredictable
  • Dyskinesias
  • Peak dose dyskinesias (chorea, athetosis,
    ballismus, myoclonus)
  • Off-period dystonias
  • diphasic dyskinesias (beginning end dose)
  • Psychiatric disturbances

38
Management
  • Important to determine relationship to time of
    dose
  • Peak-dose effects managed by
  • smaller frequent doses of L-dopa
  • risk more off periods
  • lower L-dopa add dopamine agonist
  • atypical neuroleptics (esp. clozapine)
  • ? Propanolol, fluoxetine, buspirone

39
Management
  • Trough effects managed by
  • managed as per the wearing-off strategies
  • Off-period dystonias managed with
  • night time or early am dosing
  • baclofen, botulinum, lithium
  • a delayed on problem may be due to poor gastric
    emptying
  • managed with domperidone

40
Management
  • Psychiatric disturbances
  • Depression - treated as in non-PD patients
  • Psychotic symptoms
  • favour atypical antipsychotics. Clozapine has
    least deletirious effect on PD, but risk of
    agranulocytosis
  • Ondansetron may be effective
  • Dementia
  • no effective treatment

41
Management
  • Manifestations of advanced Parkinsons and
    chronic levodopa therapy are notoriously
    difficult to manage
  • Trial-and-error strategy required
  • Seek advice from a movement disorder specialist
    in difficult cases

42
Case
  • Mr. JP initially responds to lowering his L-dopa
    dose and adding bromocriptine
  • Eventually he develops unpredictable on-off
    periods and diphasic dyskinesias
  • You refer him to a movement disorder neurologist
    for ongoing management

43
The End
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