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1. PARKINSON’S DISEASERESEARCH, EDUCATION, AND CLINICAL CENTERHOUSTON VA MEDICAL CENTER
5. PARKINSON’S DISEASE Parkinson’s disease is a progressive
neurodegenerative disease. Although
treatment is available to achieve symptomatic improvement, its management is both a challenge and an art. Care of patients with advanced disease need clinical experience,
patient cooperation and utilization of all available treatment options.
8. STAGES OFPARKINSON’S DISEASE EARLY - no functional impairment
MILD - honeymoon period
MODERATE - multiple drugs, occupational and social activities affected
SEVERE - side effects from drugs, resistant to therapy, reduced quality of life
LATE - dependent in ADL, wheelchair or bed bound
12. PARKINSON’S DISEASEDrug Therapy Monoamine oxidase-B inhibitor
Levodopa
Anticholinergics
Dopamine agonists
COMT inhibitor
14. COMPLICATIONS IN ADVANCEDPARKINSON’S DISEASE Motor fluctuations
Dyskinesias
Posture, gait, falling
Neuropsychiatric problems
Sleep disorders
Sensory phenomena
Dysautonomias
Speech disturbances
15. MOTOR FLUCTUATIONS Unpredictable response
No “on” response
“Wearing off”
Complex “on-off” oscillations
Freezing
16. DYSKINESIA Peak dose dyskinesia
Dyskinesia-improvement-dyskinesia
Dystonia
Complex movements
17. GENERAL TREATMENT STRATEGIES FOR MOTOR COMPLICATIONS Individualize treatment
Adjust medication combination
Substitute controlled-release with regular levodopa
Dose levodopa regularly
Smaller doses of levodopa; increase frequency
Increase GI transit time
Modify distribution of dietary protein
18. SPECIFIC TREATMENT STRATEGIES FORMOTOR COMPLICATIONS Adjust levodopa dosage
Maximize dopamine agonist
Add COMT inhibitor
Simplify medication regimen
Amantadine or clozapine for dyskinesia
Anxiolytics
19. POSTURAL INSTABILITY, GAIT IMBALANCE, AND FALLING Start hesitation
Retropulsion
Festination
Rigidity
Freezing
Orthostatic hypotension
Associated neurologic deficits
Orthopedic symptoms
Environmental causes
20. TREATMENTS TO IMPROVE MOBILITY AND AVOID FALLS Keep active
Exercise regularly
Physical therapy
Adjust medication regimen
Sensory cues
Assistive devices
Safety-proof living environment
21. NEUROPSYCHIATRIC PROBLEMS INPARKINSON’S DISEASE Depression
Hallucination/delirium
Behavioral fluctuation -Anxiety/panic -Agitation
Cognitive impairment
22. TREATMENT OF NEUROPSYCHIATRIC PROBLEMS IN PARKINSON’S DISEASE Antidepressants
Reduce/discontinue medications
Atypical neuroleptics
Counseling
Anxiolytics
Keep active/exercise
Educate caregivers
23. SLEEP DISORDERS IN PARKINSON’S DISEASE Insomnia
REM behavior disorder
Nightmares
Obstructive sleep apnea
Excessive daytime sleepiness
24. TREATMENT OF SLEEP DISORDERS IN PD Treat depression/anxiety
Add controlled-release levodopa at bedtime
Sleep hygiene program
Short-acting sedative hypnotics
Minimize nocturia
Clonazepam for RBD
Discontinue tricyclic drugs and MAO inhibitors
Avoid stimulants in evening
Evaluate sleep disorder
Judicious use of stimulants for EDS
25. SENSORY PHENOMENA IN PARKINSON’S DISEASE Rigidity/cramps
Dystonic pain
Musculoskeletal pain associated with immobility
Heaviness in limbs
26. TREATMENT OF SENSORY PHENOMENA IN PD Stretching exercises
Medication adjustment
Physical therapy
Baclofen
NSAIDs
Botulinum toxin injection
27. DYSAUTONOMIAS IN PARKINSON’S DISEASE Constipation
Urinary problems
Sexual problems
Orthostatic hypotension
Impaired thermoregulation
Dysphagia
Siarrhea/drooling
28. SPEECH DISORDER IN PARKINSON’S DISEASE Hypokinetic dysarthria
Lack of control of speaking rate
Monotone
Hoarse/breathy voice
Stuttering
Hypophonia
Imprecise pronunciation/mumbling
29. TREATMENT OF SPEECH DISORDER IN PD Behavioral (drill, exercise)
Instrumental (prosthetics, amplifier)
Surgical
Pharmaco-therapeutic