4.7 Article

Motor features and response to oral levodopa in patients with Parkinson's disease under continuous dopaminergic infusion or deep brain stimulation

期刊

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY
卷 19, 期 1, 页码 76-83

出版社

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-1331.2011.03437.x

关键词

apomorphine; deep brain stimulation; dyskinesias; levodopa; motor fluctuations; Parkinson's disease; subthalamic nucleus

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Background: Subthalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation (STN DBS) and continuous dopaminergic infusions (jejunal levodopa or subcutaneous apomorphine) are indicated in complicated Parkinsons disease (PD), although it remains unsettled how they compare to each other. Methods: We investigated the daytime motor condition in patients with advanced PD under monotherapy with jejunal levodopa, subcutaneous apomorphine, or STN DBS and also measured the motor changes produced by an additional standard morning dose of levodopa. Motor performance was assessed with the UPDRS-III, hand taps, the AIMS dyskinesia score and patients' diaries. Outcome measures were time to best motor 'on' after start of morning treatment, daytime variability of motor condition, motor scores. Results: The time to 'on' was longest in the jejunal levodopa group. DBS and jejunal levodopa treatments produced stable motor conditions without appreciable 'off' episodes. Continuous apomorphine infusion was associated with the worst motor scores (UPDRS-III and taps) and the most frequent off-states. Jejunal levodopa infusion was associated with the highest AIMS scores. Addition of a levodopa dose produced shortening of time to 'on' and a transient motor improvement in the jejunal levodopa group without increase in dyskinesias; in the DBS and apomorphine groups, there was an increase in dyskinesias without changes in UPDRS-III or taps. Conclusions: STN DBS provided adequate trade-off between motor improvement and dyskinesia control, although dyskinesias could be elicited by adding oral levodopa. Jejunal levodopa infusion produced adequate motor improvement with slow time to 'on' and moderate dyskinesias. Apomorphine infusion produced insufficient motor control and negligible dyskinesias.

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