Parkinson's (2Q) Flashcards

1
Q

Parkinsonism: Essentials of Diagnosis

A

Any combination of tremor, rigidity, bradykinesia, and progressive postural instability. May include cognitive impairment.

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2
Q

Parkinsonism: Epidemiology

A

Equally affects all ethnicities and has equal sex distribution.

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3
Q

Parkinson’s: Pathophysiology

A

dopamine depletion due to degeneration of dopaminergic nigrostriatal system leads to an imbalance of dopamine (not enough) and Ach (too much) @ the striatum.

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4
Q

In general, how do pharmacologic approaches to Parkinsonism work?

A

Symptomatic only (not disease altering). Rebalance the dopaminergic and cholinergic stimulation of the striatum by either increasing dopamine or blocking cholinergic stimulation.

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5
Q

Parkinsonism: clinical presentation

A

Tremor (pill rolling) relieved by purposeful movement, rigidity (increased resistance to passive ROM), bradykinesia, postural instability. Shuffling gait, leaning forward, turn en bloc, reduced arm swing.
Immobile facial expressions, widened palpebral fissures, infrequent blinking.

Myerson sign- repeated tapping on bridge of nose induces sustained blinking response.

NO muscle weakness (provided sufficient time to generate movement), NO change in DTRs, NO abnormal plantar reflex.

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6
Q

Parkinsonism DDx: old age

A

mild hypokinesia and slight tremor in isolation are common in old age.

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7
Q

Parkinsonism DDx: depression

A

expressionless face, poorly modulated voice, reduction in vocal activity are features of depression, which may or may not coexist. Sometimes a trial of antidepressant therapy is necessary.

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8
Q

Parkinsonism DDx: Wilson disease

A

Wilson will have earlier age of onset, will have other abnormal movements, Kayser-Fleischer rings, and chronic hepatitis (inc. copper in tissues).

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9
Q

Parkinsonism DDx: Huntington’s disease

A

Huntington’s may present with rigidity and bradykinesia but should also have family Hx and dementia.

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10
Q

Parkinsonism DDx: multisystem atrophy

A

autonomic insufficiency (leading to postural hypotension, anhidrosis, disturbances of sphincter control, erectile dysfunction) may be accompanied by parkinsonism, pyramidal defects, and lower motor neuron signs or cerebellar dysfunction.

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11
Q

Parkinsonism DDx: progressive supranuclear palsy

A

Bradykinesia and rigidity are accompanied by supranuclear disorder of eye movements, pseudobulbar palsy (difficulty controlling facial expressions), emotional lability, and axial dystonia.

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12
Q

Parkinsonism DDx: Jakob-Creutzfeldt disease

A

parkinsonism+dementia, myoclonic jerking, ataxia, and pyramidal signs (spasticity, hyperactive reflexes, a loss of the ability to perform fine movements, and Babinski sign)

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13
Q

Parkinsonism DDx: corticobasal degeneration

A

asymmetric parkinsonism accompanied by conspicuous signs of cortical dysfunction (apraxia-disorder of motor planning, sensory inattention, dementia, aphasia)

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14
Q

When should medical treatment be considered for Parkinson’s?

A

It is not required in the early course of the disease. It is up to the patient, as long as they understand the clinical course of their disease and how the treatments work.

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15
Q

Amantadine

A

This drug works by enhancing dopamine release from the remaining terminals and inhibiting its reuptake.
Good for patients with MILD symptoms and no disability. Ameliorates dyskinesia associated with L-dopa.

Side effects: restlessness, confusion, depression, skin rashes- rare at usual dose.

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16
Q

Levodopa- mechanism

A

Converted to dopamine (most peripheral) and improves all major symptoms, including bradykinesia.

17
Q

L-dopa side effects

A

nausea, vomiting, HTN, arrhythmias.

Later in course of use: dyskinesias, restlessness, confusion , behavioral changes. “on-off” phenomenon.

18
Q

What is the “on-off” phenomenon?

A

abrupt but transient fluctuations in the severity of parkinsonism occur unpredictably but frequently during the day. “off” period is one of marked bradykinesia (falling levels of L-dopa). “on” period is of marked dyskinesia, with increased mobility.

Common in treatment of Parkinson’s with L-dopa.

19
Q

Carbidopa

A

inhibits breakdown of levodopa (by L-AAD) to dopamine, but does not cross BBB. Increases dopamine in CNS, but not PNS.

Reduces short-term side effects of L-dopa and reduces effective dose. Does NOT prevent later side effects (dyskinesias, on-off phenomenon).

20
Q

carbidopa-levodopa (Sinemet)

A

combination of L-dopa and carbidopa, in fixed formulation.

21
Q

Diet changes for Parkinson’s treatment

A

Limit protein intake to recommended minium, and try to take it with the last meal of the day.

22
Q

L-Dopa: CI

A

Psychotic illness, narrow-angle glaucoma, Pts taking MAO-A inhibitors (or within 2 weeks of withdrawal). Use with care in malignant melanoma, active peptic ulcer.

23
Q

Pramipexole and ropinirole

A

Dopamine R agonists. Lower incidence of response fluctuations and dyskinesias vs L-dopa.

Used to be reserved for patients who could no longer tolerate L-dopa, but now given before introducing L-dopa, or with Sinemet (levodopa+carbidopa). Give fixed dose of sinemet, titrate up dose of dopamine agonist.

24
Q

Dopamine agonist side effects

A

fatigue, somnolence, nausea, peripheral edema, dyskinesias, confusion, postural hypotension, desire to sleep at hazardous times.

25
Q

Selegiline

A

Selective MAO-B inhibitor reduces breakdown of dopamine in CNS (MAO-B is mainly in striatum). Improve fluctuations or declining response to levodopa.

Avoid tyrosine-rich foods due to possibility of hypertensive “cheese” effect (no evidence though).

Start early, may alter disease course (FDA says nope).

26
Q

Tolcapone and entacapone

A

COMT inhibitors- reduce metabolism of L-dopa to INACTIVE metabolite (3-O-dopa), this leaves more available for conversion to dopamine and more sustained plasma levels.

Indicated in patients as adjunct to carbidopa/levodopa with response fluctuations or otherwise inadequate response (dose-reduce sinemet)
**Will not delay eventual development of dyskinesias

27
Q

Who shouldn’t get tolcapone?

A

Patients with liver disease due to risk of fulminant liver failure. They can get entacapone though.

28
Q

Stalevo

A

combination of levodopa with carbidopa AND entacapone. Best for patients already stabilized on equivalent dose of carbidopa/levodopa + enttacapone.

It is cheaper than buying component meds separately and requires fewer pills.

29
Q

Anticholinergics

A

Better for alleviating tremor and rigidity than bradykinesia. Start with small dose and titrate up.
Side-effects limit routine use of these drugs (dry mouth, nausea, constipation, palpitations, arrhythmia, urinary retention, confusion, agitation)
CI: Narrow-angle glaucoma (inc. intraocular pressure), prostatic hyperplasia, obstructive GI disease. Also, avoid when predisposition to delerium exists.

30
Q

Olanzapine, quetiapine, risperidone. Most effective is clozapine.

A

Atypical antipsychotics. Confusion and psychoitc symptoms may occur as a side effect of dopaminergic therapy or as part of illness. These often respond to atypical antipsychotics

Get CBCs weekly with clozapine due to rare bone marrow suppression.

31
Q

Non-medical therapies for Parkinson’s

A

Physical therapy or speech therapy may help patients, as can aids to ADLs (bed rails, bannisters, large-handled cuttlery)

32
Q

Rivastigmine

A

Cholinesterase inhibitor, may help cognitive impairment and psychiatric sx of Parkinson’s.

33
Q

Surgical treatment for Parkinson’s

A

Thalamotomy or pallidotomy may help pts who are unresponsive to medical tratment or cannot tolerate antiparkinson agents (eg diffuse vascular disease, cognitive decline). Ablation should be limited to one side. This is rarely done and has largely been displaced by brain stimulation.

34
Q

Brain stimulation

A

Another treatment for refractory Parkinson’s. High frequency stimulation of subthalamic nuclei or globus pallidus internus. Benefits all major features of disease.

Reserved for patients without cognitive impairmen tor psychiatric disorder who have a good response to levodopa but in whome dyskinesias or response fluctuations are problematic.

Takes 3-6 months of tx to achieve optimal results. Side effects: depression, apathy, impulsivity, executive dysfunction, decreased verbal fluency.

35
Q

Gene therapy in Parkinson’s

A

Injections of adeno-associated viruses encoding various genes have been tried in stage I and II trials.

36
Q

bromocriptine

A

D2 receptor agonist used to treat Parkinson