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Pivot Concepts:
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (
tremor
)
18,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The initial treatment of Parkinson's disease should be addressed to improve symptoms, slow down the progression of the illness and avoid long and short term complications. Drugs currently available for symptomatic treatment are levodopa, dopaminergic agonists, anticholinergics and amantadine. Levodopa is still the goldstandard. Both the standard preparations of carbidopa/levodopa or benserazide/levodopa and the slow release preparations are suitable for initial treatment. However, when to start levodopa remains controversial. Dopaminergic agonists are useful symptomatic drugs. They can be used in monotherapy, but usually require the addition of levodopa to obtain a satisfactory long term therapeutic response. Used as adjuvant treatment to levodopa, they help lowering the dosage of levodopa. Anticholinergic drugs effectively improve symptoms such as
tremor
and rigidity but their use is limited by their side effects, particularly in older people. Amantadine may be a useful drug for initial treatment of Parkinson's disease when symptoms are not severe. Symptomatic treatment should be considered individually in each patient. If there is only slight disability, treatment may be started with amantadine alone or with a dopaminergic agonist. If there is greater disability, levodopa or the simultaneous use of levodopa and a dopaminergic agonist should be considered. Anticholinergic drugs should be reserved for young patients with
tremor
as the main symptom. The newer dopamine agonists and inhibitors of catachol-o-
methyltransferase
(COMT) are coming therapeutic options. Selegiline, a MAOB inhibitor with a possible neuroprotective effect, should also be considered as initial option for Parkinson's disease.
...
PMID:[Initial treatment of Parkinson's disease]. 928 Jun 84
The impact of Parkinson's disease (PD) and its pharmacologic treatment on health-related quality of life (HRQL) and economic outcomes is reviewed. PD is a chronic and progressive neurologic disorder characterized by specific motor deficits resulting from the degeneration of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra. The cardinal symptoms are
tremor
, rigidity, bradykinesia, and loss of postural reflexes. PD markedly reduces HRQL and places an economic burden on society of up to $25 billion per year. Patients' inability to move freely and to perform everyday tasks restricts their independence and leads to increased reliance on caregivers and assistive devices. Emotional and psychosocial well-being is also negatively affected. As the disease progresses, the response to levodopa typically decreases and various motor complications develop; these are difficult to treat and result in further declines in HRQL. The economic costs of PD include both direct health care costs (for drugs, physician services, and hospitalization) and indirect costs (for lost worker productivity). Economic analyses of PD and its treatments can help guide effective allocation of health care resources. Various antiparkinsonian agents and formulations, such as extended-release levodopa-carbidopa and pramipexole, have been found to be cost-effective relative to other agents. The newest antiparkinsonian drugs, cathechol-O-
methyltransferase
inhibitors, also have the potential to improve HRQL and economic outcomes, although more study is needed to confirm this. The total impact of PD and its treatment can be fully appreciated only when HRQL and economic outcomes, in addition to clinical outcomes, are examined.
...
PMID:Impact of Parkinson's disease and its pharmacologic treatment on quality of life and economic outcomes. 1083 95
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a progressive, chronic, neurodegenerative disease characterized by rigidity,
tremor
, bradykinesia and postural instability secondary to dopaminergic deficit in the nigrostriatal system. Currently, disease-modifying therapies are not available, and levodopa (LD) treatment remains the gold standard for controlling motor and nonmotor symptoms of the disease. LD is extensively and rapidly metabolized by peripheral enzymes, namely, aromatic amino acid decarboxylase and catechol-
O
-
methyltransferase
(COMT). To increase the bioavailability of LD, COMT inhibitors are frequently used in clinical settings. Opicapone is a novel COMT inhibitor that has been recently approved by the European Medicines Agency as an adjunctive therapy to combinations of LD and aromatic amino acid decarboxylase inhibitor in adult PD patients with end-of-dose motor fluctuations. We aimed to review the biochemical properties of opicapone, summarize its preclinical and clinical trials and discuss its future potential role in the treatment of PD.
...
PMID:Spotlight on opicapone as an adjunct to levodopa in Parkinson's disease: design, development and potential place in therapy. 2812 88
Parkinson's disease (PD) is the second most important age-related neurodegenerative disorder in developed societies, after Alzheimer's disease, with a prevalence ranging from 41 per 100,000 in the fourth decade of life to over 1900 per 100,000 in people over 80 years of age. As a movement disorder, the PD phenotype is characterized by rigidity, resting
tremor
, and bradykinesia. Parkinson's disease -related neurodegeneration is likely to occur several decades before the onset of the motor symptoms. Potential risk factors include environmental toxins, drugs, pesticides, brain microtrauma, focal cerebrovascular damage, and genomic defects. Parkinson's disease neuropathology is characterized by a selective loss of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta, with widespread involvement of other central nervous system (CNS) structures and peripheral tissues. Pathogenic mechanisms associated with genomic, epigenetic and environmental factors lead to conformational changes and deposits of key proteins due to abnormalities in the ubiquitin-proteasome system together with dysregulation of mitochondrial function and oxidative stress. Conventional pharmacological treatments for PD are dopamine precursors (levodopa, l-DOPA, l-3,4 dihidroxifenilalanina), and other symptomatic treatments including dopamine agonists (amantadine, apomorphine, bromocriptine, cabergoline, lisuride, pergolide, pramipexole, ropinirole, rotigotine), monoamine oxidase (MAO) inhibitors (selegiline, rasagiline), and catechol-
O
-
methyltransferase
(COMT) inhibitors (entacapone, tolcapone). The chronic administration of antiparkinsonian drugs currently induces the "wearing-off phenomenon", with additional psychomotor and autonomic complications. In order to minimize these clinical complications, novel compounds have been developed. Novel drugs and bioproducts for the treatment of PD should address dopaminergic neuroprotection to reduce premature neurodegeneration in addition to enhancing dopaminergic neurotransmission. Since biochemical changes and therapeutic outcomes are highly dependent upon the genomic profiles of PD patients, personalized treatments should rely on pharmacogenetic procedures to optimize therapeutics.
...
PMID:Parkinson's Disease: From Pathogenesis to Pharmacogenomics. 2827 39
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disorder, characterized by a preferential degeneration of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta. This results in a profound decrease of striatal dopamine (DA) levels, which in turn leads to the cardinal motor symptoms of PD; muscle rigidity, hypo- and bradykinesia and resting
tremor
. Even 50 years after its initial use, the DA precursor levodopa (L-dopa), is still the most effective medical therapy for the symptomatic treatment of PD. Long-term L-dopa treatment is however, unfortunately associated with undesirable side effects such as motor fluctuations and dyskinesias. Furthermore, despite the disease alleviating effects of L-dopa, it is still discussed whether L-dopa has a neurotoxic or neuroprotective effect on dopaminergic neurons. Here we review the history of L-dopa, including its discovery, development and current use in the treatment of PD. We furthermore review current evidence of the L-dopa-induced side effects and perspectives of L-dopa treatment in PD compared to other established treatments such as DA-agonists and the inhibitors of catechol-o-
methyltransferase
and monoamine oxidase B.
...
PMID:Levodopa therapy for Parkinson's disease: history, current status and perspectives. 3270 42