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Query: UMLS:C0030567 (
Parkinson's disease
)
63,064
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We compared the vesicourethral function between progressive supranuclear palsy (7 cases) and
Parkinson's disease
(vesicourethral function study in 8 patients with dysuria and questionnaire study in 44 patients). The frequency of urinary incontinence in the 44 patients with
Parkinson's disease
was 38.7%. Vesicourethral function study showed hypersensitivity, low bladder capacity, detrusor hyperreflexia and normal sphincter EMG. The frequency of urinary incontinence in supranuclear palsy was 85.7%. Vesicourethral function study showed hyposensitivity and detrusor hyperreflexia in 6 cases, and 4 of these 6 cases had residual urine due to impaired detrusor contraction in micturition phase and/or abnormal sphincter EMG. Compliance was normal, but bladder capacity was decreased in progressive cases. Impaired contraction and hyposensitivity made it more difficult to control the urinary incontinence in supranuclear palsy than in
Parkinson's disease
. Dementia and lower ADL were frequently accompanied with supranuclear palsy (rare in
Parkinson's disease
). These were other factors that worsen the control of
incontinence
.
...
PMID:[Comparison of the vesicourethral function between progressive supranuclear palsy and Parkinson's disease]. 833 78
OBJECTIVE--To analyse the natural history of progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP or Steele-Richardson-Olszewski syndrome) and clinical predictors of survival in 24 patients with PSP confirmed by necropsy, who fulfilled the NINDS criteria for a neuropathological diagnosis of typical PSP. METHODS--Patients were selected from the research and clinical files of seven medical centres involving tertiary centres of Austria, England, France, and the United States. Clinical features were analysed in detail. The patients' mean age at onset of PSP was 63 (range 45-73) years. RESULTS--The most frequent clinical features (occurring in at least 75% of the patients) were early postural instability and falls, vertical supranuclear palsy, akinetic-rigid predominant parkinsonian disorder characterised by symmetric bradykinesia and axial rigidity unrelieved by levodopa, pseudobulbar palsy, and frontal release signs. Occasionally, segmental dystonia or myoclonus were described, but neither aphasia nor alien limb syndrome was reported. Fractures occurred in 25% of the patients but were unrelated to the severity of the gait or to the presence of falls. Median survival time was 5.6 (range 2-16.6) years. Onset of falls during the first year, early dysphagia, and
incontinence
predicted a shorter survival time. Age at onset, sex, early onset of dementia, vertical supranuclear palsy, or axial rigidity had no effect on prognosis of survival. Pneumonia was the most common immediate cause of death. PSP was most often clinically misdiagnosed as
Parkinson's disease
. Errors in diagnosis suggest that PSP is underdiagnosed. CONCLUSION--Progressive onset of early postural instability with falls or supranuclear vertical palsy in the fifth decade, should suggest the diagnosis of PSP. Onset of falls during the first year are emphasised, as they could lead to an early diagnosis and influence the prognosis of patients with PSP. Whether appropriate treatment of the dysphagia could prolong the survival of PSP patients needs to be explored.
...
PMID:Natural history of progressive supranuclear palsy (Steele-Richardson-Olszewski syndrome) and clinical predictors of survival: a clinicopathological study. 864 26
Patients with idiopathic
Parkinson's disease
(IPD) often show signs and symptoms of autonomic involvement, related to the disease itself or to its progression. The more frequently disturbances reported are connected with loss of extrapyramidal motor control, i.e. dysphagia, gastric emptying and the most common constipation. They concern about 73% of the patients. A high frequency of urinary symptoms, ranging from 37% to 71%, is also reported in IPD, in particular detrusor hyperreflexia causing urgency, frequency of micturing or urgency
incontinence
. Another autonomic groups of symptoms are related to the failure of cardiopressor adaptability which involve 15% of the subjects and are more typical of late onset cases or forms bordering with the Multiple System Atrophy, finally resulting in orthostatic hypotension (OH).
...
PMID:Autonomic disorders in Parkinson's disease. 874 4
We report a 46-year-old man with right side dominant parkinsonism who died suddenly two years after the onset. The patient was well until the age of 42 years in January of 1993, when he noted an onset of difficulty in using his right hand and then the right leg. Soon after he noted nocturnal urinary incontinence. In January of 1994, a local doctor prescribed 200 mg of levodopa with benserazide and 5 mg of bromocriptine. The patient noted some improvement. Cystometry revealed 300 ml of residual urine. He visited our clinic on 24th of December, 1996. He was alert and oriented. BP was 106/60. He showed masked face and small voice. He walked in stopped posture dragging his feet; retropulsion was noted. He showed moderate bradykinesia and rigidity more on the right side. No resting tremor or cerebellar ataxia was noted. Ankle jerks were somewhat exaggerated but no Babinski sign was noted. He continued to show residual urine, but orthostatic hypotension was absent. Routine laboratory examination was unremarkable, however, his cranial MRI showed atrophy of the left putamen and a T2-linear high signal intensity lesion along the lateral border of the left putamen. On January 15, 1997, he ate certain amount of rice cake and drank alcohol. After coming back home and while changing his clothes, he suddenly complained of chest discomfort and lost consciousness. He was pronounced dead in the afternoon. The patient was discussed in a neurological CPC. Opinions were divided between
Parkinson's disease
and striatonigral degeneration. The chief discussed arrived at a conclusion that the patient had
Parkinson's disease
, because he responded to levodopa to some extent and except for nocturnal
incontinence
he did not have wide spread autonomic failure. Postmortem examination revealed marked loss of neurons and extensive gliosis in the left putamen. The right putamen did not show such changes. The substantia nigra showed gliosis in the lateral part on both side, however, neuronal loss was not apparent. The locus coeruleus was well retained. No Lewy bodies were found. The pontine nucleus and the cerebellum were intact. However, glial cytoplasmic inclusions were seen in oligodendrocytes of the cerebral white matter and the pontine base. The heart and lungs were intact and the cause of the sudden death could not be determined. The pathologic diagnosis is striatonigral degeneration. Such a marked asymmetry of the pathologic change is quite unusual. Probably, the death in the early stage of the disease is the reason for this asymmetry.
...
PMID:[A 46-year-old man with right-side dominant parkinsonism, who suffered a sudden death]. 895
Freezing is a common symptom in parkinsonian syndromes, but its association with different causes of parkinsonism as well as with other symptoms has never been investigated. We conducted a database survey of the occurrence of freezing in parkinsonism. Of 347 patients with a clinical diagnosis of parkinsonism other than idiopathic
Parkinson's disease
and with specific data regarding freezing, 158 patients had freezing (46%). Freezing was significantly associated with progression of the disease as rated on the Hoehn & Yahr scale [odds ratio (OR), 1.69; p < 0.004]. Gender was not a risk factor for the development of freezing. Patients with drug-induced parkinsonism were at a very low risk for developing freezing (p < 0.00001; OR, 0.1). Freezing was found in a high frequency in patients with vascular parkinsonism (57%), normal-pressure hydrocephalus (56%), and generally in the group of patients who had parkinsonism resulting from neurodegenerative diseases (progressive supranuclear palsy, multiple system atrophy, and corticobasal ganglionic degeneration; 45%). Freezing was significantly associated with the presence of dementia,
incontinence
, and tachyphemia (OR, 2.01, 1.7, and 5.09, respectively).
...
PMID:Freezing phenomenon in patients with parkinsonian syndromes. 915 23
Clinical symptoms, urodynamic findings, and urological treatment of 35 patients with neurogenic bladder dysfunction caused by
Parkinson's disease
(11 patients), multiple sclerosis (10 patients), and spinocerebellar degeneration (14 patients) were reviewed retrospectively. Most of the patients had a relatively low stage of disease, when they were first seen by their urologists. Chief urological complaints were of irritation in 63.6% of
Parkinson's disease
and 64.3% of spinocerebellar degeneration cases, compared with obstruction in 80.0% of multiple sclerosis cases. Cystometry revealed underactive detrusor function in 69.2% of the patients with spinocerebellar degeneration but no abnormalities in the patients with
Parkinson's disease
or multiple sclerosis. Of 34 patients, excluding one patient lost to follow-up, the period of urological management ranged from one to 44 weeks with a mean of 11.0. The final methods of urinary drainage in 34 patients consisted of voluntary voiding in 20, clean intermittent catheterization in 11 including eight by self catheterization,
incontinence
into diaper in two, and indwelling catheter in one. Five patients were compelled to change urinary drainage method from voluntary voiding to clean intermittent catheterization because of increasing residual volume in four and progressing bladder deformity in one. However, none of them showed the clinical signs of primary disease progression. These findings indicate that in patients with
Parkinson's disease
, multiple sclerosis, and spinocerebellar degeneration, the urological symptoms can appear even in the early stage of disease. In addition, close follow-up is important in the urological management of neurogenic bladder patients with these diseases, because the disorders of the lower urinary tract may progress regardless of the status of the primary disease.
...
PMID:[Clinical findings of neurogenic bladder in patients with Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis and spinocerebellar degeneration]. 943 18
Behavioural disorders are a common feature in dementia, especially in the later stages of the disease. The most frequent disorders are agitation, aggression, paranoid delusions, hallucinations, sleep disorders, including nocturnal wandering,
incontinence
and (stereotyped) vocalisations or screaming. Behavioural disorders, rather than cognitive disorders, are the main reason why caregivers place patients with dementia in a nursing home. However, although behavioural disorders are important, there is still no international agreement with respect to the description and definition of symptoms and syndromes. This also holds true for the wide variety of scales for quantification and measurement of behavioural disorders. Drug therapy should be considered after possible underlying causes such as physical illness, drug adverse effects and environmental stressors have been ruled out, or specifically addressed, and a behavioural approach has also failed. This article briefly reviews the evidence for non-antipsychotic drug therapies, which include a variety of substances. However, antipsychotics are the group of drugs which have been most frequently studied for the treatment of behavioural syndromes in dementia. Drug responsive symptoms include anxiety, verbal and physical agitation, hallucinations, delusions, uncooperativeness and hostility, whereas wandering, hoarding, unsociability, poor self-care, screaming and other stereotyped behaviour seem to be unresponsive to all drugs. Although the use of classical antipsychotics is limited by extrapyramidal symptoms, anticholinergic adverse effects, sedation and postural hypotension, the newer antipsychotics offer the chance of a better risk:benefit ratio. This article reviews the small amount of data published on the use of the newer antipsychotics, and concludes that risperidone at low dosages (0.5 to 2 mg/day) seems to be especially useful for the treatment of behavioural symptoms in dementia because of its negligible anticholinergic adverse effects. The use of clozapine is limited by its anticholinergic activity, at least in dementia of the Alzheimer and Lewy body types. However, in patients with psychosis arising from
Parkinson's disease
it seems to be the drug of choice, and similar activity is likely for olanzapine. There are no published data on other newer drugs, such as sertindole, quetiapine or ziprasidone. Future studies should also address questions of dementia heterogeneity and should compare different drug treatments and treatment combinations.
...
PMID:Behavioural problems associated with dementia: the role of newer antipsychotics. 1006 7
Disturbances of autonomic functions are, without a doubt, part of the symptomatology of
Parkinson's disease
, but do have little importance as initial symptoms. They are more prominent in the advanced stages of the disease, when they then have an impact on the kind of patients' complaints and on the effects of the therapeutic measures. For example, pollakisuria and urge
incontinence
are restrictive for social activities and, simultaneously, nighttime akinesia disturbs sleep and recovery. Dysfunction of gastrointestinal mobility brings about a retardation in drug transport from the stomach to the upper intestine and thereby in drug absorption with the sequel of an inadequate response of the parkinsonian symptomatology. Detailed registration--there is a large number of methods--of autonomic functions provides insight into the extent of the degenerative process, but mainly helps to find ways to improve the resulting dysfunctions. Whereas some signs like thermoregulation, sebaceous secretion and sleep disturbances caused by night-time akinesia do improve under drug treatment, others like cardiovascular dysregulation and delayed colon transit-time may even be worsened.
...
PMID:[Autonomic disturbances in Parkinson's disease and their treatment]. 1008 27
During the period from July 1995 to June 1996 we performed transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP) on 824 patients with benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). Among them, 13 were dementia patients between 74 and 96 years old; they presented with urinary hesitancy in 6, retention in 4, frequency in 2 and
incontinence
in 1 patient. Past history included stroke in 7, hypertension in 6, pulmonary tuberculosis in 4, diabetes in 3, asthma in 2, angina pectoris in 1,
Parkinson's disease
in 1, pneumonia in 1, and hepatitis in 1. Careful preoperative examination revealed that they were proper candidates for TURP. They underwent TURP under spinal anesthesia. The mean operative time was 34 min, ranging from 20 to 60 min. The adenoma resected weighed 24 g on the average, ranging from 7.5 to 48 g. During surgery, although hypotension was noted in 2 patients, there was no serious morbidity. Their mental condition was well controlled with ketamine and diazepam during and after surgery. Postoperative complications included acute myocardial infarction in 1, multiple gastric ulcer in 1, and decubitus in 1. None died within 3 months after TURP, 3 died there after, and 10 patients were alive at the mean follow-up period of 26 months. Six patients reported good urination, 3 reported some improvement in urination after surgery, although requiring intermittent catheterization and 1 developed mild
incontinence
. In conclusion, TURP appears to provide some benefit in selected patients with dementia and should not be considered to be a contraindication for such patients.
...
PMID:[Transurethral resection of the prostate for patients with dementia]. 1036 42
Voiding dysfunction associated with
Parkinson's disease
has been well described in male patients. Few studies detail voiding dysfunction in female Parkinson patients. Apparent differences between patients with Parkinson's subtypes have also not been sufficiently defined. The majority of female Parkinson patients who have urinary symptoms (>70%) will manifest symptomatic urgency with or without urge
incontinence
. The remaining patients will have mixed irritative and obstructive or purely obstructive symptoms. Urodynamic evaluation demonstrates detrusor hyperreflexia in 70%-80% of female patients. However, women with Parkinson-related syndromes demonstrate detrusor hypocontractility or areflexia in 20%-30% of cases. Electromyography reveals sphincteric dysfunction (pseudodyssynergia, bradykinesia) in 30%-50% of female Parkinson patients. Also, in patients with Parkinson-related syndromes a high prevalence of peripheral denervation can be documented on electromyographic study of the pelvic floor. Voiding dysfunction associated with
Parkinson's disease
in female patients is complex and not always congruent with symptoms. Urodynamic evaluation is crucial to fully elucidate lower urinary tract dysfunction in female patients with Parkinson's and Parkinson-related disorders.
...
PMID:Female voiding dysfunction and movement disorders. 1038 79
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