Parkinsonism Flashcards

1
Q

What builds up in the brain leading to neuronal death?

Where does it build up?

What type of neurons are affected?

What sex is it commoner in?

A

Lewy bodies

Substancia nigra

Dopaminergic neurons

Male

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2
Q

S+S:

Onset?
Assym/symmetrical?

A

Insidious onset

Asymmetrical onset, stays worse on that side.

UNILATERAL onset is characteristic of Parkinson disease!

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3
Q

What is the Parkinsonism triad?

A

Tremor
Rigidity
Brady/hypokinesia

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4
Q
  1. Tremor:
  • What part of body tremors?
  • How is it usually described?
  • When is it worse?
  • What makes the tremor go away?
  1. Rigidity:
  • What is the rigidity known as?
  • What type of rigidity do you get when combined with the tremor?
  • How does the person feel?
  • What can you get them to do on examination that will make it more pronounced?
  1. Brady/hypokinesia:
    - What is slowed
    - Face
    - What about their blinks
    - Speech
    - What does micrographia mean?
    - How can bradykinesia be found on motor examination?

What about their gait?

A

Fingers/hands (can be found in legs, jaw, lips and tongue
Pill-rolling movement
Worse at rest
Voluntary movement

Hypertonia - Lead-pipe rigidity
Cogwheeling
They feel stuck

You get them to do something on contralateral side - so making a fist, painting the wall etc. 
========
Slow initiation of movement 
Slow speed
Slow amplitude 

Blank face - (expressionless - looks like mask - hypomimia)

Reduced blinks

Monotone speech (later slurred or absent)

Features abnormally small, cramped handwriting or the progression to progressively smaller handwriting.

Festinant gait - shuffling, pitched forward, with reduced arm swing

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5
Q

Other symptoms:

Postural instability:

  • What is the main feature of this?
  • How is this tested?
  • What is their posture like?

TRAP

– Tremor, Rigidity, Akinesia, and Postural instability

Autonomic symptoms:

  • Urine
  • Stool
  • Skin
  • Saliva
  • BP - which contributes to instability and falls

WHY DO THEY NOT GET HYPERREFLEXIA?

A

Imbalance and tendency to fall
Pull test
Forward-leaning gait - thats why they fall

Urinary frequency and urgency 
Constipation 
Sweating 
Dribbling 
Orthostatic hypotension - contributes to instability and falls

Parkinson’s disease is characterized by degeneration of the substantia nigra, a structure in the midbrain (labeled as SN in the picture above) which is part of the basal ganglia circuitry. As mentioned above, the basal ganglia does not have direct connections to the LMN. Thus, disorders of the basal ganglia are not expected to affect the stretch reflex directly. That’s why they don’t cause hyperreflexia.

https://www.quora.com/Why-isnt-hyperreflexia-a-Parkinsons-sign-while-hypertonia-is-present

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6
Q

Other symptoms:

EARLY signs:

What is a sensory sign that patients may notice before symptoms even develop?

Neuropsychiatric symptoms:

  • Mood
  • Sleep - what type of dreams do they have?
  • What type of hallucinations do they have?
  • How many years post-diagnosis does it take for them to develop dementia?

What is an early motor sign in their gait?
What are some personality changes that may be noticed?

LATE signs:

Motor:

  • What happens to their face?
  • What about with their eyes?
A

Anosmia or hyposmia

Depression

Sleep - REM sleep disorder, insomnia, vivid dreams

Visual hallucinations

> 1 yr - only called Lewy body dementia if dementia comes before parkinsonism.

Lack of arm swimming

Inability to interpret sensations and hence to recognize things.

Hypomimia - low degree of facial expression
Reduced blinking

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7
Q

DDx:

Neurodegenerative - 2

Drugs that have anti-dopaminergic effects may induce parkinsonism (PSEUDOPARKINSONISM). What types of drugs can cause this? - 4

What metabolic disorder of the liver can cause this?

A TIA’s and CNS infections could also cause Parkinsonism.

Tremor:

  • What is psychological tremor?
  • What is essential tremor?
  • What can make an essential tremor better?
  • What is a dystonic tremor? Where does it happen?

Others:

What CVD event may cause Parkinsonism?

A

Wilson’s Disease

PD
LBD - Dementia with LB 
------
TYPICAL antipsychotics 
Anti-emetics (metaclopamide) 
CCB;s 
Amioadrone 
Lithium 

High amplitude, present in all

Symmetrical, postural tremor - ALCOHOL makes better

Coarse
Irregular tremor
Often in face and neck

Multiple strokes

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8
Q

Diagnosis:

What type of diagnosis is it?

Pharmacological diagnosis:
- What can be done?

If a diagnosis is unclear or there is poor treatment response, what imaging can be done? - 3

A

A clinical diagnosis with:
- Brady/hypokinesia + Tremor, rigidity or postural instability”

Levodopa challenge test - symptoms will be relieved if it is PD

CT/MRI

DaTSCAN - a specific type of single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) imaging technique that helps visualize dopamine transporter levels in the brain.- CAN DISTINGUISH PD FROM AN ESSENTIAL TREMOR

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9
Q

DaTSCAN:

What type of scan is it?

What does it show in PD?

What does it differentiate between?

What does it not differentiate between?

A

SPECT

Striatal dopaminergic neuron loss

PD and drug-induced or essential tremor

Not between PD and LBD or Parkinson’s plus syndromes, as they also feature striatal dopaminergic neuron loss.

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10
Q

Consernative/MDT Management:

Who is involved in the MDT?

Role of a physio?
Role of an OT?
Who can help with problems with communications, swallowing or salivation?

Who else needs to be contacted?

A

Specialist nurse

Improves gait and balance

Help with work, family role, and ADLs

Speech and language therapist

DVLA

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11
Q

Medical Management:

Why is Rx often delayed in early disease?

What 2 drugs should be given if motor symptoms are affecting QoL OR they are > 65 yrs old?

What drug should be given if the motor symptoms are NOT affecting QoL OR they are <65 years old?

What drugs are given in later disease?

A

Symptoms are usually not causing significant impairment

Levodopa + dopa-decarboxylase inhibitor (CARBIDOPA)

Carbidopa/levodopa remains the most effective drug to treat PD. In addition to helping prevent NAUSEA carbidopa prevents levodopa from being converted into dopamine prematurely in the bloodstream, allowing more of it to get to the brain.

MAO-B inhibitor or Dopamine agonists

These drugs are used in combo + COMT inhibitors

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12
Q

Medical Management:

Rx for non-motor features, after considering non-pharmacological measures and reversible causes (e.g. drug side effects) first:

  • Rx for psychosis?
  • Rx for sleep problems:
    - For daytime sleepiness - M
    - For REM sleep disorder - C,
  • Rx for dementia?
  • Rx for orthostatic hypotension - (M - vasopressor, F - steroid)
  • Rx for mood disorders?

iF THE patient is <65 yrs old with just a tremor, what can be prescribed?

A

Anti-psychotics - Quetiapine or clozapine

Modafinil for daytime sleepiness
Clonazepam or melatonin for REM sleep disorder

Cholinesterase inhibitors - done-evil

Midodrine or fludrocortisone

SSRIs - Citalopram etc.

Anticholinergics - WARNING - can worsen psych symptoms (particularly dementia)

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13
Q

Surgical Management:

Deep brain stimulation is a Rx for PD. It improves motor symptoms.

What is it?

Indications?

A

A surgery to implant a device that sends electrical signals to brain areas responsible for body movement.

Electrodes are placed deep in the brain and are connected to a stimulator device.

Similar to a heart pacemaker, a neurostimulator uses electric pulses to regulate brain activity.

Primarily recommended for patients with severe motor symptoms who respond to levodopa treatment but are not sufficiently controlled by it (or if a decrease in dosage is necessary due to side effects)

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14
Q

Levodopa:

How is sometimes shortened?

Why is a bittersweet drug?

What is given with it to reduce peripheral conversion of levodopa to dopamine? Why?

What side effects does peripheral dopamine cause?

What is an alternative for levodopa?

A

L-DOPA

Most effective, however, also has motor complications (dyskinesia)
It also has increasing side effects as you increase the dose.

DDCI - Dopa-decarboxylase inhibitor (CARBIDOPA)
Prolonged therapeutic effect

N&V

Apomorphine

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15
Q

Levodopa:

Side effects - short term:

  • As with all meds-
  • BP
  • Legs, sacrum and lungs
  • Neuropsychiatric
  • Sleep disturbance - how?
  • What colour does their urine turn?
A

N&V

Postural hypotension

Oedema

Confusion, visual hallucinations, delusions etc.

Vivid dreams/nightmares
Daytime drowsiness

Red urine

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16
Q

Levodopa

Side effects - Long term:

  • Dyskinesia - define?
  • What happens before the next dose is due?
  • Why can the patient get bradykinesia at times?
A

Involuntary movement, including chorea and dystonia

It may wear off - it can also unpredictably go on-off leading to bradykinesia.

17
Q

Levodopa:

How are later side effects and Rx resistance managed:

  • What is done for the weaning off just before the next dose?
  • What can be given for motor complications (bradykinesia)? - 2
  • How to reduce the off-time of the drug? - 2
  • What is done if all of the above is not effective?
A

Fractionation of the dose - frequent small doses

Dopamine agonists amantadine
Continour apomorphine infusion

COMT inhibitors
Intermittent apomorphine infusions

Duodenal infusion (Duodopa) - via duodenum

OR

Deep brain stimulation

18
Q

Adjuncts and alternative to levodopa - Dopamine agonists:

MOA

Drugs:

  • Oral - R, P
  • Subcut - A
  • Transdermal - R

What is freezing in Parkinson’s?
What is dyskinesia?
What is used to Rx the above 2?

A

Bind D1/D2 receptors int he striatum

Ropinirole, Pramipexole
Apomorphine
Rotigotine

A common symptom experienced by people with Parkinson’s disease (PD) is “freezing”: a sudden, but temporary, inability to move. It can happen at any time, such as when walking (called a freezing gait) or when attempting to rise from a seated position.

Abnormality or impairment of voluntary movement.

Apomorphine

19
Q

Adjuncts and alternative to levodopa - Dopamine agonists:

Side effects:

  • Energy
  • GI - 2
  • They may get impulsive control disorders. What sort of things may they be doing?
  • NEUROPSYCHIATRIC - 2 **
  • Sacrum and legs

What may apomorphine cause on the skin?

A

Fatigue, sudden onset of sleep

N&V, constipation

Pathological gambling, sex, eating and shopping

Can induce psychosis and hallucinations

Peripheral oedema

Uncomfortable subcutaneous nodules

20
Q

Adjuncts and alternative to levodopa - MAO-B inhibitors:

What does MAO-B stand for?

MOA

Drug names - Ra, SE

Indications - 2

Side effect

An antidepressant that can’t be prescribed alongside this?

A

Monoamine oxidase B

Blocks dopamine degradation in cells

Rasagiline
Selegiline

An alternative initial Rx option
Levodopa wearing- off

Anticholinergic - (dry mouth, constipation etc.)

SSRI (Serotonin syndrome risk)

21
Q

Adjuncts and alternative to levodopa - COMT inhibitors:

What does COMT stand for?

MOA - 2

Drugs - En, To

Indications - 2

Side effects:

  • What colour does urine turn?
  • GI
A

Catechol-O-methyltransferase

Blocks dopamine and L-DPA degradation outside the cell

Entacapone
Tolcapone

Wear off
Dyskinesia

Orange urine
Diarrhoea

22
Q

Adjuncts and alternative to levodopa - Amantadine:

MOA

What is it used for, if other agents fail?

A

Increases dopamine release and reduces uptake

Dyskinesia

23
Q

Parkinson’s plus syndromes:

What do we mean by this?

A

Conditions featuring parkinsonism plus additional distinctive features/

24
Q

Drug-induced parkinsonism:

Causes:

  • Anti-dopamine drugs - one for psychosis and the other for N&V
  • Drugs for epilepsy, anxiety and depression
  • CV drugs
A

Antipsychotics
Antiemetics

Valproate
Lithium
Fluoxetine

CCBs
Amiodarone

25
Q

Drug-induced parkinsonism:

What differentiates this from PD?

Management:

  • The first thing that should be done
  • What if symptoms are severe and disabling?
A

Usually bilateral symptoms
Subacute onset
Postural tremor - worse on moving/holding

Stop drug
Levodopa

26
Q

Essential tremor:

It is known to have a bimodal onset. What does this mean?

What is a major risk factor?

Tremor characteristics:

  • Where is the tremor?
  • Sym/assym?
  • It is worse posturally and kinetically. What does this mean?
  • What strange thing improves it like in UC?

Management:

  • What beta-blocker is used?
  • What barbiturate is used? - P
A

Early adulthood and >60 yrs old

FH

Hands (less commonly head and voice)
Symmetrical (sometimes slight asymmetry)

Worse when arms outstretched
Worse with movement

Gets better with alcohol

Propranolol
Primidone

27
Q

Restless leg syndrome:

What causes it?

Who is it commoner in?
Onset?

Presentation:

  • What do patients complain about in the lower legs?
  • When is it worse?
  • What provides relief?
  • What time of day is it worse?
  • What does it tend to affect in the night?
A

Unknown

Uncomfortable sensations in lower legs

Worse at rest

Movement of the legs as they feel the intense urge to move them

Evening time

Affects sleep

28
Q

Restless leg syndrome:

When should gabapentin or pregabalin be given?

What the second line?

A

When Rx affects the quality of life, functioning, or sleep

Dopamine agonists