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Parkinson's Drugs Tied to Gambling Addiction
 Study links bizarre side effect to some combination of medications

By Serena Gordon
 HealthDay Reporter





(HealthDay is the new name for HealthScoutNews.)


MONDAY, Aug. 11 (HealthDayNews) -- A combination of some Parkinson's disease
medications may produce a rare but potentially devastating side effect:
addictive gambling behavior.


In the Aug. 12 issue of the journal Neurology , researchers report finding
nine pathological gamblers in a group of more than 1,000 people being treated
for Parkinson's disease. These people said they hadn't had any gambling
problems in the past.


Dr. Mark Stacy, lead author of the study, says he began this study because he
had two patients come to him reporting huge gambling losses soon after Stacy
had changed the doses of their medications. Stacy is the medical director of
the Parkinson's Disease and Movement Center at Duke University Medical Center
in Durham, N.C., but was at the Muhammad Ali Parkinson Research Center in
Phoenix at the time of the study.


He and his colleague then went back and reviewed their patient charts for a
year. Out of 1,184 people with Parkinson's disease, they found seven other
cases of problem gambling.


In all of the cases, the gambling was severe enough to cause financial
problems. Two of the people reporting pathological gambling behavior had lost
more than $60,000. On average, the people with gambling problems had been
diagnosed with Parkinson's disease for 11 years before the start of their
addictive gambling behavior.


All nine were taking levodopa and a dopamine agonist when their gambling
problems began. Levodopa is a drug that changes into dopamine in the brain,
and dopamine agonists activate dopamine receptors in the brain.


Dopamine is a neurotransmitter with many functions in the brain. People with
Parkinson's disease have low levels of dopamine, which is believed to help
control smooth movement. Dopamine also appears to affect mood and
personality.


Of those with a gambling problem, eight were taking a dopamine agonist called
pramipexole and the other was taking one called pergolide. None of the people
studied who were taking levodopa alone reported problem gambling, and those
taking a different dopamine agonist, ropinirole, also reported no problems.


Stacy says he's not sure how the medications cause addictive gambling
behavior, but seven of the patients reported their problems began within a
month of when their dosage was increased.


This suggests, Stacy says, that higher doses of the dopamine agonists act as a
"catalyst" for problem gambling behavior.


Pathological gambling affects between 0.3 percent to 1.3 percent of the
general population, according to the study, compared to 1.5 percent in the
people taking pramipexole. Stacy says the availability of gambling around
Phoenix and the need for seniors to find a place to socialize may have played
a role as well.


When their medications were switched, or the doses were lowered, most of the
patients were able to control or stop their gambling behavior, according to
the study. Some of them also attended Gamblers Anonymous meetings.


Dr. Jay Van Gerpen, a neurologist and movement disorder specialist from
Ochsner Clinic Foundation in New Orleans, says he wasn't surprised by this
study's findings.


"Medicines for Parkinson's disease may elicit unwanted side effects relating
to mood and personality," says Van Gerpen. "These medicines are extremely
useful, but they may produce unwanted effects. Dopamine agonists can be
associated with changes in personality, such as sexual inappropriateness, and
changes in sleep cycles. Patients need to be aware of these possibilities."


Stacy says while the side effect is rare, it's important for doctors and
patients to know that higher doses of these medications may increase the risk
of problem gambling.


More information


For more information on Parkinson's disease, go to the National Institute of
Neurological Disorders and Stroke . If you think you or someone you love may
have a gambling problems, take this quiz from the National Council on Problem
Gambling .


SOURCES: Mark Stacy, M.D., medical director, Parkinson's Disease and Movement
Disorder Center, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, N.C.; Jay Van
Gerpen, M.D., neurologist, Ochsner Clinic Foundation Hospital, New Orleans;
Aug. 12, 2003, Neurology

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