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Parkinson's Disease

Parkinson's disease (paralysis agitans or PD) is a neurodegenerative disease of the substantia nigra, an area in the basal ganglia of the brain. The disease was first recognised and its symptoms documented in 1817 in An Essay on the Shaking Palsy by the British physician Dr James Parkinson; the associated biochemical changes in the brain of patients were identified in the 1960s. Some gene defects associated with the disease were identified only recently; others remain unknown.

The disease involves a progressive disorder of the extrapyramidal system, which controls and adjusts communication between neurons in the brain and muscles in the human body. It also commonly involves depression and disturbances of sensory systems.

Parkinson's disease is widespread, with a prevalence estimated between 100 and 250 cases per 100,000 in North America; globally prevalence estimates range from a low of 15 per 100,000 in China to a high of 657 per 100,000 in Argentina. Because prevalence rates can be affected by socio-economically driven differences in survival, incidence is a more sensitive indicator: rates have ranged from 1.5 per 100,000 in China to a high of 14.8 per 100,000 in Finland. [BC Medical Journal Volume 43, Number 3, April 2001, 133-137 Epidemiology of Parkinson’s disease Benjamin C.L. Lai, MD, MSc, and Joseph K.C. Tsui, MD, FRCP(UK), FRCPC]

About 2% of the population develops the disease some time during life, though the mean age at onset is 58-60. Symptoms usually begin in the upper extremities, and are usually unilateral (one-sided) or asymmetrical at onset.

Symptoms

Parkinson disease affects movement (motor symptoms). Typical other symptoms include disorders of mood, behavior, thinking, and sensation (non-motor symptoms). Individual patients' symptoms may be quite dissimilar; progression is also distinctly individual, presumably because the pattern of brain cell pathology is individual.

Diagnosis

Differential diagnosis

The differential diagnosis for a patient presenting with Parkinsonian symptoms is:

  • Idiopathic Parkinson's disease
  • Essential tremor (ET): tremor is typically associated with posture-holding and voluntary movement, and absent at rest. A head tremor suggests ET; a lip or chin tremor is more typical of PD.
  • Parkinson plus syndromes (see below)
  • Secondary parkinsonism due to drugs, toxins, stroke, head trauma, or hydrocephalus

Parkinson's tremors differ from essential tremors in that the latter are posture or action tremors, have bilateral tremors involving the hands, head and voice, and are alcohol responsive. In contrast, Parkinson's tremors are rest tremors, and usually start unilaterally.

Imaging

SPECT with ([123I]FP-CIT) or PET with 18F-fluorodopa are the two imaging modalities used to assess dopamine transporter density and the integrity of nigrostriatal pathways in the central nervous system. Currently (2005) FP-CIT is widely used in Europe for the diagnostic workup of Clinically Uncertain Parkinsonian Syndromes; although it is not available in the United States.