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Published: 09 September 2008 15:45 


Onset of Parkinson's disease linked with painIncrease image

Patients with Parkinson's disease are more likely to feel pain, a study has 
shown.
Researchers in Italy compared 402 patients with Parkinson's disease to 317 
healthy individuals of the same age.
Test subjects were ask to detail any pain present which they had felt for the 
last three months.
More of the Parkinson's group experienced pain than the control group, 69.9 
per cent and 62.8 per cent respectively.
Much of the PD group's pain was a result of dystonia and rates of non-dystonic 
pain (66.4 per cent) were closer to the levels of the control group (62.8 per 
cent).
However, researchers are adamant that their conclusions demonstrate a 
significant association between the illness and pain.
The study's authors wrote: 'These data support the hypothesis that pain begins 
at clinical onset of Parkinson's disease or thereafter as a non-motor feature 
of Parkinson's disease.'
Archives of Neurology (2008) 65: 1191-1194

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