406 E2 - Parkinsons Flashcards

1
Q

Parkinson Disease Definition

A

a progressive, degenerative disorder of basal ganglia function

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2
Q

what are the basal ganglia

A

-function w/ cerebellum to make smooth, coordinated movement
-the substantia nigra in the basil ganglia has cells that produce dopamine this is the part we are most concerned with

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3
Q

Parkinsonism: primary

A

-idiopathic = parkinson’s disease
-genetic or sporadic

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4
Q

Parkinsonism: secondary

A

acquired by: infection, intoxication, trauma & drug induced

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5
Q

parkinson’s disease risk factors

A

-age: >60, peak @ 70
-gender (male)
-genetic: both dominant and recessive

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6
Q

emerging risk factors for parkinson’s disease

A

-environmental exposures
-depression
-head trauma
-hysterectomy
-coffee consumptions (non consumption)

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7
Q

neurotransmitters

A

enable neurotransmission -> essentially they communicate between the neurons and they travel across the synapses and either block or facilitate the relay of the stimulus

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8
Q

dopamine has what type of effect

A

inhibitory and excitatory -> depends one what type of receptor it binds to

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9
Q

what type of dopamine effect is lacking with Parkinson’s disease?

A

inhibitory effects

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10
Q

how does dopamine work

A

helps muscles work smoothly, controllably and without unwanted movement by inhibiting unnecessary movements
increases coordination, balance and muscle control

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11
Q

acetylcholine (ACH) is what type of neurotransmitter

A

excitatory

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12
Q

what does acetylcholine do

A

stimulates muscle movement and can cause uncoordinated movement
essential for muscle function and works w/ dopamine in a balanced state

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13
Q

if dopamine levels decline and acetylcholine levels stay the same, what happens to muscle movement

A

coordinated muscle movement decreases

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14
Q

in parkinson’s what is the relationship ration between dopamine & ACH

A

too much ACH in relation to dopamine -> resulting in loss of coordinated movement

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15
Q

what happens to dopamine in primary Parkinson’s

A

there is damage to the dopamine producing cells

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16
Q

what happens to dopamine in secondary Parkinson’s

A

there is an alteration in production of dopamine (ex: infection, drug, head trauma)

17
Q

primary parkinson’s pathogenesis

A

destruction of substantia nigra in basal ganglia -> dopamine levels decrease -> imbalance between dopamine & ACh -> relative excess of ACh -> loss of controlled movement and balance

18
Q

clinical manifestations of Parkinson’s Disease

A

-bradykinesia (slowness of movement)
-cogwheel rigidity (stiff muscles)
-resting tremor (pill rolling tremor)
-shuffling gait
-mask like expression
-postural instability
-loss of balance

19
Q

onset on parkinsons symptoms

A

gradual onset and progression
-may only involve 1 side of the body at first

20
Q

what is the classic triad of parkinson’s manifestations

A

-rest tremor
-rigidity
-bradykinesia

21
Q

what is usually the first sign of parkinson’s

22
Q

tremor in parkinson’s

A

-handwriting effected
-more prominent at rest
-aggravated by stress or concentration
-“pill roll”

23
Q

differentials between a parkinson’s tremor vs essential tumor: essential

A

-results from faulty neurological impulses
-tremors occur w/ motor function
-no other manifestations of parkinson’s disease

24
Q

differentials between a parkinson’s tremor vs essential tumor: parkinson’s

A

-results from dopamine deficiency
-tremors occur w/ rest and improve w/ movement
-presents w/ other manifestations of parkinsons disease

25
rigidity
resistance to passive movement
26
"cogwheel rigidity"
movements are jerky and slow
27
why does rigidity occur
-sustained muscle contraction -too much ACh in comparison to dopamine
28
rigidity is associated w/
muscle soreness, aches & pain **muscles don't get to relax**
29
bradykinesia
loss of automatic movement (aka spontaneous movement) **major cause of disability in parkinson's**
30
examples of bradykinesia
-no blinking -no swinging of arms -no swallowing of saliva (drooling) -no self expression w/ hands & face
31
postural instability
a decreased ability to prevent falling caused by impairment of centrally mediated postural reflexes
32
gait disturbances seen in parkinson's
shuffle or short stepped gait
33
parkinson's disease: complication
-dementia (40%) -sleeping disturbances -fatigue -depression/anxiety -decreased mobility (malnutrition, pneumonia, UTI's, skin breakdown) -drug related complications
34
why do people with parkinson's get malnutrition
d/t difficulty preparing meals and feeding themselves