Basal Ganglia disorders Flashcards
What is the classic triad in Parkinson’s Disease (PD)? [4]
Describe other characteristic symptoms that PD patient may face [4]
State 4 psychiatric features of PD
A clinical syndrome of Bradykinesia + atleast one of:
- Tremors
- Rigidity
- Postural Instability
Other characteristic features:
- Mask-like face
- Micrographia
- Impaired sense of smell
- Postural hypotension (autonomic dysfx)
- Pyschiatric
- Depression
- Psychosis
- Dementia
- Sleep disturbance
What causes Parkinson’s? [4]
- Drug Induced (Dopamine Antagonists)
- Vascular (mini-strokes to basal ganglia)
- Idiopathic (Include Lewy Body Dementia)
- Parkinson’s Plus Sydromes
Describe manifestation of bradykinesia [2]
Describe tremor [2]
Explain why there is cogwheel rigidity [2]
Bradykinesia is apparent through:
- Gait: short, shuffling steps with reduced arm swinging
- Difficulty initiating movement
Tremor
- worse when stressed or tired, improves with voluntary movement
- typically ‘pill-rolling’, i.e. in the thumb and index finger
Cogwheel rigidity:
- Lead pipe > cogwheel due to superimposed tremor
Dopamine is the main neurotransmitter involved in Parkinson’s, where in the brain does it take effect?
Brain stem
- Vomiting Centres
Basal Ganglia
- Initiating/Controlling Movement
Limbic System & Frontal Cortex
- Reward Centres
How/where is dopamine synthesised?
Dopamine is synthesised in both the brain and periphery but only its precursors can cross the BBB. Tyrosine -> DOPA -> Dopamine
If Dopamine itself can’t cross the BBB how do we deliver it as a drug?
We give DOPA as a precursor. We have to block the AAAD enzyme in the liver to prevent the DOPA being converted to dopamine before it reaches the Brain
Explain the variety of dopamine receptors?
D1-D5 receptors (All metabotropic i.e. G-protein coupled)
Different receptors appear in different parts of the brain
What drug categories are there for Parkinson’s?
Dopamine Precursors
Dopamine Agonists
Dopamine breakdown Inhibitors (used to extend half life of levodopa)
What enzymes are targeted by Dopamine breakdown Inhibitors?
MAO-B COMT
What is used as a dopamine precursor?
Levodopa
How do we extend levodopa’s half life?
- MAO-B inhibitors
- COMT inhibitors
- Slow Release Levodopa
List some dopamine breakdown inhibitors?
MAO-B inhibitors: Selegiline, Rasagiline & Safinamide COMT inhibitors: Entacapone & Tolcapone
We also use enzyme inhibitors to reduce Levodopa consumption in the periphery, how and why?
Carbidopa & Benserazide are AAAD inhibitors preventing conversion of Levodopa -> Dopamine in the periphery. This allows more oral levodopa to reach the brain and reduces PNS side effects
List some dopamine agonists?
Ergots - Stimulate fibrosis and very dirty so no longer in use Non-ergots - Not as effective as Levodopa Apomorphine - Heavily stimulates brainstem dopamine receptors making it a powerful emetic
What are the benefits of dopaminergic drugs?
Improves motor features of parkinson’s: - Bradykinesia - Rigidity - Tremor But doesnt improve things like cognition, balance or dysarthia
Given the side effects of dopaminergic drugs, what could dopamine antagonists be used for?
N&V Long-term psychosis treatment
Domperidone is a notable dopamine antagonist, what is it used for?
As an anti-emetic because it doesnt cross the BBB, but the vomiting centre in the medulla is actually outside it. This means domperidone won’t treat psychosis but will be anti-emetic without worsening parkinson’s. Hence its used in conjunction with apomorphine to prevent the emetic effect of the dopamine agonist
Explain pathogenesis of PD
Neuronal Degeneration in the substantia nigra, particular its dopaminergic inputs to the striatum.
Dopamine is involved in enhancing the basal ganglia’s direct & indirect pathways without it it can be impossible to initiate the right movements and stop the wrong ones.
How do you diagnose parkinsonism?
- Clinical diagnosis
- Should be slowly progressive (over 5-10 yrs)
- Symptoms will often be assymetric
- Response to treatment
Describe investigations used to diagnose PD
Dopamine Transporter SPECT (a functional imaging technique)
* DaTSCAN: an ioflupane radioisotope is injected into patients.
* A gamma camera produces SPECT images, which demonstrate the isotope’s high affinity for the dopamine transporter, particularly in the striatum.
* Patients with Parkinson’s disease may demonstrate either unilaterally or bilaterally reduced uptake.
* Dopaminergic drugs can influence the scan and it must therefore be interpreted in this context.
L-DOPA challenge:
* patients are assessed before and after a large dose of levodopa (200-400 mg), using a validated measure
* such as a timed walk and/or unified Parkinson’s disease rating scale (UPDRS) score.
* Improvement with levodopa, though not diagnostic of Parkinson’s disease, is a useful guide to the likely efficacy of dopaminergic therapy.
What causes huntington’s?
Its a hereditary genetic disorder
It occurs by profound loss of the caudate, putamen and globus pallidus
You lose the inhibitory effect of the basal ganglia and lots of violent, innapropriate movements are initiated
What are the symptoms of huntington’s?
- Hyperkinesia
- Dementia
- Personality disorders
The characteristic chorea is spontaneous, uncontrolled, rapid flicks and major movements with no purpose
What are the complications of parkinson’s?
- Depression
- Dementia (E.g. Lewy Body)
- Speech and balance issues
- Autonomic (E.g. problems controlling BP & continence)
How does PD initially present in symmetry of symptoms?
Parkinson’s disease classically presents asymmetrically, so very symmetrical initial presentations suggest alternative causes (e.g. essential tremor, dystonic tremor, drug induced tremor, vascular Parkinsonism, normal pressure hydro- cephalus). Later in the disease duration, the signs may appear more symmetrical.