The pharmacological management of the behavioral aspects of Parkinson's disease: an update.
Introduction
Behavioural symptoms are common manifestations of Parkinson's disease and include depression, anxiety, impulse control disorders, hallucinations, psychosis, and cognitive dysfunction. They remain inadequately addressed in many patients despite their relevance for quality of life and disability. This applies also to impulse control disorders where the most common approach in recent literature is to refrain from using dopamine agonists without consideration about their potential benefit on motor complications.
Areas covered
We conducted a narrative review searching for articles on behavioral symptoms in Parkinson disease and selected those which included involved neurotransmitters such as dopamine, noradrenaline, serotonin, acetylcholine. We specifically focused our search on open-label and randomized double-blind studies and biomarkers which could best characterize these clinical manifestations.
Expert opinion
Management of Parkinson disease behavioural manifestations lacks clear guidelines and standardized protocols beside general suggestions of dose adjustments in dopamine replacement therapy and use of antidepressants or antipsychotic drugs with little consideration of patients' age, sex, comorbidities, and motor status. We suggest a pragmatic approach which includes education of affected patients and caring people, dealing with complex cases by experienced multidisciplinary teams, use of cognitive behavioural therapy, and psychological counselling to complement drug treatment.
Overview publication
Title | The pharmacological management of the behavioral aspects of Parkinson's disease: an update. |
Date | 2023-09-01 |
Issue name | Expert opinion on pharmacotherapy |
Issue number | v24.15:1693-1701 |
DOI | 10.1080/14656566.2023.2240228 |
PubMed | 37493445 |
Authors | |
Keywords | Anxiety, Depression, Neuropsychiatric Symptoms, Neuropsychiatric symptoms, Parkinson's Disease |
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