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J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2001;71:607-610 doi:10.1136/jnnp.71.5.607
  • Paper

Proprioception in Parkinson's disease is acutely depressed by dopaminergic medications

  1. P O'Suilleabhain,
  2. J Bullard,
  3. R B Dewey
  1. Department of Neurology, University of Texas, Southwestern Medical Center, 5323 Harry Hines Boulevard, Dallas, TX 75390–9036, USA
  1. Dr P O'SuilleabhainPadraig.OSuilleabhain{at}UTSouthwestern.edu
  • Received 24 January 2001
  • Revised 11 June 2001
  • Accepted 26 June 2001

Abstract

OBJECTIVES Impaired proprioception has been previously reported in patients with Parkinson's disease. It was hypothesised that dopaminergic medications transiently depress proprioception, with amplification of adventitious movements as a result. This study tested for effects on proprioception of dopaminergic drugs, and for associations between such effects and drug induced dyskinesias.

METHODS In 17 patients with Parkinson's disease, arm proprioception was tested in the practically defined “off” state, and retested 1 hour after taking levodopa or dopamine agonist. Testing consisted of side to side comparison of elbow angle, matching the contralateral elbow angle, and spatial recall of an unrestrained arm.

RESULTS Proprioception deteriorated as hypothesised, reaching significance by one tailedt test for each of the three tasks. The relative deterioration (and the 95% lower confidence bound for estimated deterioration) was 31% (4%) for side to side elbow comparison, was 27% (11%) for accuracy in matching the contralateral elbow angle, and was 11% (0%) for spatial recall. Dyskinetic (n=6) and non-dyskinetic (n=11) patients did not differ significantly in these effects on proprioception. Control subjects (n=6) and untreated parkinsonian subjects (n=5) did not significantly differ from the parkinsonian patients in the off state.

CONCLUSIONS Administration of levodopa and dopamine agonists were associated with a modest acute suppression in central responsiveness to joint position. It is speculated that compensatory exaggerated movement could account in part for the phenomenon of drug induced dyskinesias.

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