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Pain is common in Parkinson's disease
Fri Sep 19, 2008 3:39pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Nearly 70 percent of patients with Parkinson's 
disease report pain, which is significantly higher than the frequency of 
pain in healthy controls, according to a brief report in the Archives of 
Neurology.
"Patients with Parkinson's disease often complain of painful sensations," 
which may involve body parts affected or unaffected by dystonia, Dr. 
Giovanni Defazio, from the University of Bari in Italy, and colleagues point 
out.
Dystonia, a hallmark feature of Parkinson's disease, refers to the cluster 
of movement disorders in which sustained muscle contractions occur and cause 
tremor, twisting or abnormal postures. These movements are involuntary and 
can be painful.
Whether Parkinson's patients are more likely than their peers in the general 
population to have pain, however, has been unclear.
To investigate, the researchers surveyed 402 Parkinson's disease patients 
and 317 healthy controls about the same age regarding their pain, when it 
began, the type, and the location.
Overall, 70 percent of patients had pain compared with 63 percent of the 
controls, the report indicates. The difference, the authors note, was 
primarily due to a lack of dystonia in the control group.
Pain unrelated to dystonia occurred with comparable frequency in each group, 
hovering around 64 percent. Still, the authors noted a link between 
Parkinson's disease and pain, starting after parkinsonian symptom onset.
Compared with controls, Parkinson's disease patients were more likely to 
have cramping and central neurological pain. In 22 percent of patients with 
dystonic pain and 25 percent with nondystonic pain, the pain began prior to 
starting antiparkinsonian therapy.
"Our findings suggest that pain among Parkinson's disease patients is 
heterogeneous in quality, body localization, and relationship with the 
clinical onset of Parkinson's disease," the authors conclude.  Continued...

Rayilyn Brown
Director AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
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