Questions and Answers About Parkinson's Disease
What Is Parkinson's Disease?
Parkinson's disease is a progressive neurological
disorder that results from degeneration of neurons in a region of the
brain that controls movement. This degeneration creates a shortage of the
brain signaling chemical (neurotransmitter) known as dopamine, causing the
movement impairments that characterize the disease. Parkinson's disease
was first formally described in "An Essay on the Shaking Palsy,"
published in 1817 by a London physician named James Parkinson, but it has
probably existed for many thousands of years. Its symptoms and potential
therapies were mentioned in the Ayurveda, the system of medicine practiced
in India as early as 5000 BC, and in the first Chinese medical text, Nei
Jing, which appeared 2500 years ago.
What Are The Symptoms of Parkinson's?
Often, the first symptom of Parkinson's disease is
tremor (trembling or shaking) of a limb, especially when the body is at
rest. The tremor often begins on one side of the body, frequently in one
hand. Other common symptoms include slow movement (bradykinesia), an
inability to move (akinesia), rigid limbs, a shuffling gait, and a stooped
posture. People with Parkinson's disease often show reduced facial
expressions and speak in a soft voice. Occasionally, the disease also
causes depression, personality changes, dementia, sleep disturbances,
speech impairments, or sexual difficulties. The severity of Parkinson's
symptoms tends to worsen over time.
How Many People Are Affected?
In the United States, at least 500,000 people are
believed to suffer from Parkinson's disease, and about 50,000 new cases
are reported annually. These figures are expected to increase as the
average age of the population increases. The disorder appears to be
slightly more common in men than women. The average age of onset is about
60. Both prevalence and incidence increase with advancing age; the rates
are very low in people under 40 and rise among people in their 70s and
80s. Parkinson's disease is found all over the world. The rates vary from
country to country, but it is not clear whether this reflects true ethnic
and/or geographic differences or discrepancies in data collection.
What Causes Parkinson's Disease?
Although there are many theories about the cause of
Parkinson's disease, none has ever been proved. Researchers have reported
families with apparently inherited Parkinson's for more than a century.
However, until recently, the prevailing theory held that one or more
environmental factors caused the disease. Severe Parkinson's-like symptoms
have been described in people who took an illegal drug contaminated with
the chemical MPTP (1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine) and in
people who contracted a particularly severe form of influenza during an
epidemic in the early 1900s. Recent studies of twins and families with
Parkinson's have suggested that some people have an inherited
susceptibility to the disease that may be influenced by environmental
factors. The strong familial inheritance of the chromosome 4 gene is the
first evidence that a gene alteration alone may lead to Parkinson's
disease in some people.
How is Parkinson's Diagnosed?
Parkinson's disease is usually diagnosed by a
neurologist who can evaluate symptoms and their severity. There is no test
that can clearly identify the disease. Sometimes people with suspected
Parkinson's disease are given anti-Parkinson's drugs to see if they
respond. Other tests, such as brain scans, can help doctors decide if a
patient has true Parkinson's disease or some other disorder that resembles
it. Microscopic brain structures called Lewy bodies, which can be seen
only during an autopsy, are regarded as a hallmark of classical
Parkinson's. Autopsies have uncovered Lewy bodies in a surprising number
of older persons without diagnosed Parkinson's -- 8% of people over 50,
almost 13% of people over 70, and almost 16% of those over 80, according
to one study. As a result, some experts believe Parkinson's disease is
something of an "iceberg; phenomenon," lurking undetected in as
many as 20 people for each known Parkinson's patient. A few researchers
contend that almost everyone would develop Parkinson's eventually if they
lived long enough.
What Treatments are Available?
There is no cure for Parkinson's disease. Many
patients are only mildly affected and need no treatment for several years
after the initial diagnosis. When symptoms grow severe, doctors usually
prescribe levodopa (L-dopa), which helps replace the brain's dopamine.
Sometimes doctors prescribe other drugs that affect dopamine levels in the
brain. In patients who are very severely affected, a kind of brain surgery
known as pallidotomy has reportedly been effective in reducing symptoms.
Another kind of brain surgery, in which healthy dopamine-producing tissue
is transplanted into the brain, is also being tested. Finally, researchers
are trying to identify substances that will prevent dopamine-producing
brain cells from dying.
Source: National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, May 2000
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