Print

Print


Hmmph - Parkinson's personality, indeed! I'm certainly glad that particular 
myth, of which I was unaware, has been put to rest. Thanks, Judith, for 
posting this.

Kathleen

<<October 29, 2001


Dopamine, Parkinson's Personality Link Debunked

 By Merritt McKinney


NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Results of a new study challenge the idea

that a personality type often

present in people with Parkinson's disease (news - web sites) is

directly related to brain levels of the neurotransmitter dopamine.


The research does not dispute the existence of a ''parkinsonian

personality,'' but the findings suggest

that low levels of dopamine may not be the cause.


It has long been suggested that many people with Parkinson's fit a

certain personality

type--compulsive, hard-working, introverted, morally rigid, serious and

quiet.


Some studies have shown that people with the disease receive low scores

on tests of

``novelty-seeking.'' Normally, the brain rewards pleasure--such as a new

experience--with the release

of the brain chemical dopamine. Some scientists have speculated that low

dopamine levels--one of the

characteristics of Parkinson's--may explain why people with the disease

are less likely to seek out new

things.


But in a study reported in the November 6th issue of the journal

Proceedings of the National Academy

of Sciences (news - web sites), Dr. Valtteri Kaasinen and colleagues at

the University of Turku in

Finland did not find a connection between dopamine levels and low

``novelty-seeking'' in people with

Parkinson's.


In the study, the researchers gave personality tests to 61 people with

Parkinson's who were not taking

medication for the disease and a ``control'' group of 45 healthy people.

The investigators also

measured dopamine levels in 47 unmedicated Parkinson's patients.


Parkinson's patients scored somewhat lower than controls on the

novelty-seeking test, the report

indicates. But there was no significant connection between

novelty-seeking and dopamine levels in

several parts of the brain.


Parkinson's patients had significantly higher scores on measures of

``harm-avoidance,'' which relates to

anxiety and depression. Surprisingly, Kaasinen and colleagues found that

the higher scores were linked

to higher levels of dopamine in one part of the brain.


The more patients felt pessimistic, fearful of uncertainty and shy, the

higher were their levels of

dopamine in an area called the right caudate nucleus.


This connection ``is difficult to explain with our current knowledge,''

according to the researchers.


Kaasinen's team suggests that it is possible that a ``unique disturbance

of circuitry'' in the brains of

people with Parkinson's might explain the paradox. It is possible that

the link between that tendency to

avoid harm and high levels of dopamine in the right caudate might occur

in depressed or anxious

people with other chronic diseases, the researchers note.


SOURCE: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2001;98:13272-

  Copyright © 2001 Reuters Limited.

  Copyright © 2001 Yahoo! Inc.


--

Judith Richards, London, Ontario, Canada

[log in to unmask]

                        EASE THE BURDEN

                                FIND A CURE>>

----------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign-off Parkinsn send a message to: mailto:[log in to unmask]
In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn