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Some Parkinson's Drugs May Trigger Compulsive Gambling

By Amanda Gardner
HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, July 11 (HealthDay News) -- Eleven people with Parkinson's disease
temporarily became compulsive gamblers after taking a class of drugs designed
to control movement problems caused by the illness, a new study reports.



This is the latest in a series of case studies linking such drugs -- called
dopamine agonists -- to pathological gambling in Parkinson's patients.


"This lends continued support towards the hypothesis that family of medicines
may cause difficulty with behavioral issues in this population of patients,"
said Dr. M. Leann Dodd, lead author of the study and senior associate
consultant in the department of psychiatry and psychology at the Mayo Clinic,
in Rochester, Minn.



"It's a very rare side effect but we certainly want anyone treated to
understand that the potential is there so that they are open to talk with
their neurologists and get on top of these behaviors before they would cause
them any damage personally or professionally," she added.



In addition, six of the patients in the new report developed other behavioral
problems in tandem with the pathological gambling. These included compulsive
eating, increased alcohol consumption, and an obsession with sex.



The study, which appeared online Monday and will be published in the September
issue of Archives of Neurology, raises some tantalizing questions about how
addictions work and how they might be treated or cured.


Parkinson's disease is characterized by the death of neurons in an area of the
brain known as the substantia nigra, and is usually treated with drugs that
enhance the dopamine-signaling system. While dopamine, a brain chemical,
helps regulate movement and balance, it also plays a central role in the
body's "reward" system and can reinforce various behaviors, not all of them
productive.


The 11 case studies presented in the new study were startling, not just for
the dramatic onset of a dangerous compulsion, but because the reduction or
discontinuation of the drug resulted in an equally dramatic cessation of the
habit.


One 52-year-old married man started gambling "uncontrollably" after raising
the dose of his dopamine agonist. His wife phoned the neurologist to report
that her husband had lost more than $100,000, was eating compulsively -- he
gained 50 pounds -- and had an obsession with sex that resulted in him
carrying on an extramarital affair. The man lost his excessive interest in
gambling and sex when the medication was tapered off, according to the
report.



Another man with no history of gambling started frequenting casinos for days
at a time, exhibited an increased sex drive, drank more alcohol and ate
excessively. When his medications were stopped, he reverted to having sex
once weekly instead of four times a day.


And one 68-year-old man lost more than $200,000 gambling in six months and
left town for days at a time without telling anyone where he was.



All of the patients -- who were seen and evaluated between 2002 and 2004 at
the Mayo movement disorders clinic -- started gambling only after starting on
a dopamine agonist: either pramipexole (nine of the 11 cases) or ropinirole
(two cases). The gambling stopped when the drug was reduced or discontinued
in eight of the 11 cases. The other three cases were not available for
follow-up, the researchers said.



"The fact that they were able to reduce the behavior by reducing or getting
rid of the drug implies that it was the drug," said Paul Sanberg,
distinguished professor of neurosurgery and director of the University of
South Florida Center for Aging and Brain Repair. "It pretty well verifies
that dopamine stimulation underlies these negative behaviors."


All the patients were given other therapy or a reduced dose of the same
therapy for their Parkinson's symptoms.


Since the paper was submitted for publication, the authors have identified 11
more patients with similar problems. Previous studies have estimated that
about 5 percent of people taking pramipexole may have the gambling side
effect. Neurologists are beginning to take note and talk to patients about
this potential side effect, Dodd said.


The fact that compulsive gambling occurs more frequently with pramipexole may
provide clues into the nature of addictive behavior, the researchers said.


Dopamine, a neurotransmitter, can sit on one of several different receptor
sites in the brain. Pramipexole, it turns out, has a much higher affinity for
the receptor site D3 than others, Dodd said.



"The D3 receptor seems to be localized and more concentrated in the limbic
areas of the brain, those areas of the brain that are tied to emotions and
internal reward systems," Dodd explained. "It would be very interesting to
see whether or not medications that have the opposite effect on D3 might curb
some of these behaviors."


Sanberg added: "Does this lead to potential treatments for blocking D3? That's
clearly something to look at."



But the dopamine agonists still have value for Parkinson's patients, Dodd
said.


"This is not a medication to throw away. It's a good medication. It's often
used at lower doses for restless leg syndrome with very good response and we
still use it to treat many, many Parkinson's patients," she said. "[The
gambling] is reversible. We want patients to be aware so that they can bring
it up. If someone were to notice just a slight change of behavior in their
loved one, they could mention it to their neurologist."



SOURCES: M. Leann Dodd, M.D., senior associate consultant, department of
psychiatry and psychology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn.; Paul Sanberg,
Ph.D., D.Sc., distinguished professor of neurosurgery, and director,
University of South Florida Center for Aging and Brain Repair, Tampa;
September 2005 Archives of Neurology

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