Parkinson’s Disease: Symptoms, Treatment Principles, and Medications

Parkinson’s Disease: Symptoms, Treatment Principles, and Medications

Parkinson’s disease is a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by ‌tremors‌, ‌rigidity‌, and ‌bradykinesia‌ (slowed movement). Symptoms often start in one limb or side of the body and gradually spread. A hallmark feature is ‌resting tremor‌ (shaking when limbs are inactive), which distinguishes it from conditions like essential tremor (action tremor during movement). Patients may also experience non-motor symptoms, including:

  • Constipation
  • Swallowing difficulties
  • Excessive drooling
  • Oily skin (seborrhea)
  • Psychological issues such as depression, cognitive decline, dementia, sleep disturbances, and hallucinations.

Principles of Pharmacotherapy

  1. Start Low, Go Slow‌: Begin with the smallest effective dose and gradually increase based on symptom control.
  2. Aim for Functional Independence‌: Prioritize improving daily living abilities over complete symptom resolution.
  3. Combination Therapy‌: Use adjunct medications to enhance dopamine efficacy, reduce dosage, and minimize long-term side effects like motor fluctuations.
  4. Personalized Treatment‌: Tailor therapy to age, symptom severity, side effect tolerance, and financial constraints.

Medication Options

1. Anticholinergics

  • Use‌: Early-stage tremor-dominant patients. Avoid in those with cognitive impairment.
  • Example‌: Trihexyphenidyl (Artane®), 1–2 mg, 3 times daily.

2. Dopamine Replacement Therapy

  • Gold Standard‌: Levodopa combined with a decarboxylase inhibitor (e.g., carbidopa/levodopa). Effective for rigidity, bradykinesia, and drooling.

3. Dopamine Agonists

  • First-line for Young Patients‌: Used alone early or as levodopa adjuncts.
    • Bromocriptine‌: Start at 1.25 mg/day, gradually increase to 10–20 mg/day.
    • Piribedil (Trastal®)‌: 150–200 mg/day (controls resting tremors).
    • Pramipexole‌: Titrate from 50 μg/day to an optimal dose (divided into 3 doses).

4. MAO-B Inhibitors

  • Neuroprotective Potential‌: Enhances levodopa effects.
  • Example‌: Selegiline, starting at 5 mg/day (morning dose), up to 10 mg/day.

5. COMT Inhibitors

  • Address Motor Fluctuations‌: Reduces “wearing-off” and “on-off” phenomena in levodopa therapy.

6. Amantadine

  • Early Symptom Relief‌: Improves rigidity and bradykinesia temporarily (effects fade after months).

Other Therapies‌: NMDA receptor antagonists, neurotrophic factors.

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Parkinson's Disease Dementia (Tremor Paralysis Dementia) – Medical Guidelines Posted onam8:55 - 05/04/2025

[…] Avoid Saturated Fats and Animal Organs: Reducing intake of these foods can help prevent negative effects on health and may improve the efficacy of Parkinson’s treatments. […]

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