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Parkinson's Drugs Tradeoff: Better Muscle Control, Worse Side Effects, 
Review Shows
ScienceDaily (Apr. 20, 2008) - Compared to older drugs for Parkinson 
disease, a newer class of medications called dopamine agonists might be 
better at preventing some of the disabling muscle control problems 
associated with the disease and its treatment, a new review of recent 
studies concludes.
However, patients who take dopamine agonists suffer from an increase in 
numerous side effects -- from sleepiness to nausea to hallucinations in some 
cases -- and are more likely to drop out of treatment than those who take 
the older treatment levodopa or no drugs at all.
"Patients taking dopamine agonists were more than twice as likely to quit 
treatment, suggesting that the side effects were severe enough to have a 
meaningful impact on patients' quality of life, outweighing the muscle 
control problems," said Rebecca Stowe of the University of Birmingham, the 
review's lead author.
The review of studies appears in a recent issue of The Cochrane Library, a 
publication of The Cochrane Collaboration, an international organization 
that evaluates medical research. Systematic reviews like this one draw 
evidence-based conclusions about medical practice after considering both the 
content and quality of existing medical trials on a topic.
Parkinson's disease is a degenerative disease of the nervous system that can 
impair a person's movements and speech. Dopamine agonists, drugs that 
stimulate the production of the important neurotransmitter dopamine in the 
brain, are increasingly used as first-line therapies for the disease.
Levodopa, an older drug that can be metabolized in the brain to produce 
dopamine, is also used widely in Parkinson's treatment. However, patients 
who use levodopa over long periods can develop painful, distorting, 
involuntary muscle spasms and repetitive movements.
Stowe and colleagues reviewed 29 studies that included 5,247 patients who 
were in the early stages of Parkinson's disease and did not show any 
significant signs of muscle and movement problems. Some of the studies 
compared dopamine agonists only with levodopa, while some used a combination 
of dopamine agonists and levodopa.
There was no significant difference in the death rates between patients 
using dopamine agonists and those who did not take the drugs, the 
researchers found.
"Importantly, the review highlights that the balance of risks and benefits 
of dopamine agonists remains unclear," said Stowe, who called for further 
studies on patients' overall quality of life and the economic costs of the 
treatments.
Researchers are tracking another troubling effect of dopamine agonists --  
their potential link to impulsive behaviors such as uncontrolled gambling.

Rayilyn Brown
Director AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
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