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Query: UMLS:C0030567 (
Parkinson's disease
)
63,064
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This study investigates the prevalence and demographic characteristics of hypersexuality in
Parkinson's disease
(PD).
Impulse control disorders
in PD patients have been associated with dopamine agonist therapy. Moreover, hypersexuality and pathological gambling have been associated with males, while females may be inherently thought to be more likely to participate in compulsive shopping and binge-eating behaviors. In this study, a screening mail-in survey was sent to all PD patients at a single Movement Disorders Center. One hundred forty one of 400 (35.3%) research packets were returned completed. Fifteen of 141 patients met initial screening criteria for hypersexual behavior. After detailed interview, only 6/141 (4.3%) of PD patients met criteria for pathologic hypersexual behavior. These behaviors included: compulsive masturbation, prostitution, and paraphilias. Patients with a younger age of PD onset were more likely to exhibit hypersexual behavior. Unlike previous report, no significant association was found between hypersexuality and gender or dopamine agonist use. Rather, this study suggests that physicians should be vigilant for hypersexual behavior in all PD patients, regardless of gender and PD medication regimen. Ultimately, given the innate sensitivity of the topic and survey limitations, it is very likely that hypersexual behavior in our cohort, as it is in the general PD population, has been under-reported.
...
PMID:Prevalence of hypersexual behavior in Parkinson's disease patients: Not restricted to males and dopamine agonist use. 2036 Aug 87
Impulse control disorders
(ICDs) are a set of behaviours that take place in a subgroup of patients with
Parkinson's disease
(PD). Although reduction or switch of dopamine agonists or decrease of levodopa are the common treatment, this does not always improve the compulsive behaviour. Zonisamide (ZNS) has proved effective for motor symptoms in PD and it may be also useful in the field of ICDs. The aim of our study is to evaluate the safety and efficacy of ZNS in PD patients with ICDs who did not improve following a reduction of either levodopa or dopamine agonists. Fifteen patients were initiated on 25 mg/day ZNS dosage, which was titrated to 200 mg/day, as tolerated. Severity of the behaviours was assessed by means of the Clinical Global Impression and the Barratt Impulsiveness Scale, while motor impairment was assessed by means of the Unified
Parkinson's Disease
Rating Scale (UPDRS). Demographic data, medication dose, treatment duration and adverse events were also collected and analyzed. There was a marked reduction in the severity of impulsive behaviours and global impulsiveness (mean change from baseline -5.8 to -4.8, respectively). UPDRS changed only marginally. ZNS was generally well tolerated. Our study suggests that ZNS may be effective for ICDs in PD. The lack of studies with other medications to treat these behaviours in PD and the potential beneficial effects of ZNS for motor complications make this drug important in the treatment of the disease.
...
PMID:Zonisamide in managing impulse control disorders in Parkinson's disease. 2050 31
In
Parkinson's disease
executive functions are altered. We used a Virtual Reality version of the Multiple Errand Test in order to evaluate decision-making ability in 12 patients and 14 controls. Patients with
Parkinson's disease
, even if not-demented, showed strategies full of errors, suggesting that
impulse control disorder
, very frequent in course of disease, could precede cognitive dysfunctions.
...
PMID:Executive functions in a virtual world: a study in Parkinson's disease. 2054 77
A range of impulse control disorders (ICDs) are reported to occur in
Parkinson's disease
(PD). However, alterations in brain activity at rest and during risk taking occurring with ICDs in PD are not well understood. We used both arterial spin labeling perfusion functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to directly quantify resting cerebral blood flow (CBF) and blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) fMRI to measure neural responses to risk taking during performance on the Balloon Analogue Risk Task (BART). Eighteen PD patients, either with a diagnosis of one or more ICDs (N = 9) or no lifetime
ICD
history (N = 9), participated. BOLD fMRI data demonstrated that PD patients without an
ICD
activate the mesocorticolimbic pathway during risk taking. Compared with non-
ICD
patients,
ICD
patients demonstrated significantly diminished BOLD activity in the right ventral striatum during risk taking and significantly reduced resting CBF in the right ventral striatum. ICDs in PD are associated with reduced right ventral striatal activity at rest and diminished striatal activation during risk taking, suggesting that a common neural mechanism may underlie ICDs in individuals with PD and those without PD. Thus, treatments for ICDs in non-PD patients warrant consideration in PD patients with ICDs.
...
PMID:Decreased ventral striatal activity with impulse control disorders in Parkinson's disease. 2058 79
Since the original descriptions of hedonistic homeostatic dysregulation syndrome and pathological gambling in
Parkinson's disease
, impulse control disorders, such as compulsive spending, punding, or binge eating, are increasingly recognized. Although the term hedonistic homeostatic dysregulation syndrome has been supplanted by the concept of the dopamine dysregulation syndrome, the features of severe dyskinesias, cyclical mood disorder with hypomania or manic psychosis, and impairment of social and occupational functioning in the setting of increased intake of antiparkinson therapy remain. At this time,
impulse control disorder
is defined as maladaptive behaviors that emerge with disease progression and increasing antiparkinson medications. These behaviors may be disruptive, such as punding, or destructive, such as compulsive spending, gambling, binge eating, or hypersexuality.
...
PMID:Impulse control disorders in Parkinson's disease. 2094 52
There is an increasing awareness that addictive disorders may occur in
Parkinson's disease
(PD), either typical substance-related addictions that are commonly known as dopamine dysregulation syndrome (DDS) or behavioral addictive syndromes, usually presenting as impulse control disorders (ICDs) that include pathological gambling, hypersexuality, compulsive eating and buying. DDS is characterized by the use of dopaminergic drugs in doses larger than those required to treat motor symptoms, despite the development of disabling dyskinesias. Case reporting and prospective studies have reported an association between ICDs and the use of dopamine-agonists (DAs) at greater doses, while DDS has been associated with levodopa at greater doses or short-acting DAs. Risk factors for addictions in PD include male sex, younger age or younger age at PD onset, history of substance use or bipolar disorder, and a personality profile characterized by impulsiveness. Functional neuroimaging studies such as functional MRI and PET have investigated in vivo the neurobiological basis of these pathologic behaviors. The management for clinically significant
ICD
symptoms should consist of modifications to dopamine replacement therapy (DRT), particularly DAs, which is usually associated with an improvement of ICDs, whereas there is no empiric evidence supporting the use of psychiatric drugs in ICDs in PD. Management of DDS is not easy, mainly because balancing the drugs in the long term could represent a difficult problem. Hypomanic and psychotic episodes are best managed with a reduction of DRT performed in hospital also by using atypical antipsychotics low dose.
...
PMID:Spectrum of addictions in Parkinson's disease: from dopamine dysregulation syndrome to impulse control disorders. 2108 Jan 89
A recent controlled clinical trial suggested a role for amantadine as a treatment for pathological gambling in patients with
Parkinson disease
(PD). Analyzing data from a large cross-sectional study of impulse control disorders (ICDs) in PD, amantadine use (n = 728), vs no amantadine use (n = 2,357), was positively associated with a diagnosis of any
ICD
(17.6% vs 12.4%, p < 0.001) and compulsive gambling specifically (7.4% vs 4.2%, p < 0.001). This amantadine association remained after controlling for covariates of amantadine use, including both dopamine agonist use and levodopa dosage. Further research, including larger clinical trials, is needed to assess the role of amantadine in the development and treatment of ICDs in PD.
...
PMID:Amantadine use associated with impulse control disorders in Parkinson disease in cross-sectional study. 2139 19
Questions exist regarding the validity of patient-reporting of psychiatric symptoms in
Parkinson's disease
(PD). We assessed observer variability and validity in reporting of
impulse control disorder
(
ICD
) symptoms in PD by using the Questionnaire for Impulsive-Compulsive Disorders in
Parkinson's Disease
(QUIP). PD patients and their informants (71 pairs) completed the QUIP to assess four ICDs (compulsive gambling, buying, sexual behavior, and eating) in patients. Trained raters then administered a diagnostic interview. Sensitivity of the QUIP for a diagnosed
ICD
was 100% for both patient- and informant-completed instruments, and specificity was 75% for both raters. Approximately 40% of patients without an
ICD
diagnosis had a positive QUIP, suggesting that many PD patients experience subsyndromal
ICD
symptoms that require ongoing monitoring. Agreement between patient- and informant-reporting of any
ICD
behaviors on the QUIP was moderate (kappa=0.408), and for individual ICDs was highest for gambling (kappa=0.550). Overall, a negative QUIP from either the patient or informant rules out the possibility of an
ICD
, while a positive QUIP requires a follow-up diagnostic interview and ongoing monitoring to determine if symptoms currently are, or in the future become, clinically significant.
...
PMID:Patient versus informant reporting of ICD symptoms in Parkinson's disease using the QUIP: validity and variability. 2118 35
Parkinson's disease
(PD) has been associated with the development of impulse control disorders (ICDs), possibly due to overstimulation of the mesolimbic system by dopaminergic medication. Preliminary reports have suggested that deep brain stimulation (DBS), a neurosurgical procedure offered to patients with treatment-resistant PD, affects
ICD
in a twofold way. Firstly, DBS allows a decrease in dopaminergic medication and hence causes an improvement in ICDs. Secondly, some studies have proposed that specific ICDs may develop after DBS. This paper addresses the effects of DBS on ICDs in patients with PD. A literature search identified four original studies examining a total of 182 patients for ICDs and nine case reports of 39 patients that underwent DBS and developed ICDs at some point. Data analysis from the original studies did not identify a significant difference in ICDs between patients receiving dopaminergic medication and patients on DBS, whilst the case reports showed that 56% of patients undergoing DBS had poor outcome with regards to ICDs. We discuss these ambivalent findings in the light of proposed pathogenetic mechanisms. Longitudinal, prospective studies with larger number of patients are required in order to fully understand the role of DBS on ICDs in patients with PD.
...
PMID:Impulse control disorders following deep brain stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus in Parkinson's disease: clinical aspects. 2140 2
The development of an
impulse control disorder
(
ICD
) is now recognized as a potential nonmotor adverse effect of dopamine replacement therapy in
Parkinson's disease
(PD). Here, recent epidemiological, neurophysiological and genetic advances are summarized to outline potential mechanisms involved. It is safe to say that dopaminergic drugs, particularly dopamine agonists, are able to induce ICDs only in a minority of patients, while the majority are somehow protected from this adverse effect. While it seems clear that men with early-onset PD are more vulnerable, other predisposing factors, such as various current or pre-PD personality traits, are a matter of debate. In terms of neurophysiological advances, one may find striking analogies to the addiction literature suggesting a causal chain beginning with certain predisposing conditions of striatal dopamine synapses, an "unnatural" increase of dopamine stimulation and a characteristic pattern of resulting functional changes in remote networks of appetitive drive and impulse control. Future prospects include potential add-on medications and the possible identification of genetic predispositions at a genome-wide scale. Functional imaging of pharmacogenetic interactions (imaging pharmacogenomics) may be an important tool on that road.
...
PMID:Impulse control disorders in Parkinson's disease: seeking a roadmap toward a better understanding. 2154 15
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