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Researchers Identify Potentially Dangerous Side Effect Of Dopamine
Agonists ST. PAUL, MN -- June 9, 1999 -- New Parkinson's drugs may
trigger potentially-dangerous sleep attacks, according to a report in
this month’s issue of the journal Neurology. Eight Parkinson's patients
were in car accidents due to sudden sleep attacks while driving. In four
patients sleep attacks also occurred during business meetings and
phone calls.

All the patients were taking one of the newer medications, which
improve parkinsonian symptoms, pramipexole or ropinirole.
Discontinuing the medications eliminated the sleep attacks.

Sleep attacks cause patients to unknowingly fall asleep. Patients
describe attacks as a sudden, irresistible and overwhelming feeling of
sleepiness. "Suddenly falling asleep can be harmless if a patient is
watching TV or reading a book," said neurologist and study author
Steven Frucht, MD, of theColumbia-Presbyterian Medical Center in New
York, NY. "However, if a patient is driving an automobile, this side effect
is a serious safety issue." Frucht and colleagues noticed by chance that
several of their Parkinson's patients had been in car accidents. "Looking
closer at this coincidence, we discovered that all the patients had
suddenly fallen asleep at the wheel and all were taking pramipexole,"
Frucht said. The eight patients experiencing sleep attacks had normal
mental skills, excellent driving records and no history of sleep problems.
At the time of their accidents, patients were taking pramipexole an
average of seven months. Following the accidents, six patients stopped
taking pramipexole and two reduced their doses. None of the patients
experienced further sleep attacks. One patient took ropinirole, then
experienced the same side effect while driving and stopped using the
medication. Pramipexole and ropinirole are dopamine agonists that are
used to treat motor symptoms of early and advanced Parkinson's
disease. Both drugs were approved by the United States Food and Drug
Administration for Parkinson's treatment in 1997. Medications classified
as dopamine agonists can cause drowsiness in some people. In clinical
trials, drowsiness affected 27 percent of early Parkinson's patients
treated with pramipexole and 13 percent of those treated with ropinirole.
"We are aware that these drugs may cause drowsiness, but sleep
attacks were not previously reported," Frucht said. "Pramipexole and
ropinirole remain effective treatments for patients with Parkinson's
disease," Frucht explained. "I still use these medications with my
patients, but now I warn them about sleep attacks. In the future warning
labels on these medications should be altered to alert patients about the
possibility of sleep attacks." Parkinson's disease is a slowly progressive,
neurodegenerative disease that affects more than 500,000 people in the
U.S.

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