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ST. PAUL, Minn. – Drivers with mild to moderate Parkinson's disease may be at 
higher risk of crashes on foggy days and other times of low visibility. The 
research, involving a driving simulation test, is published in the October 6, 
2009, print issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy 
of Neurology.

In addition to affecting movement, Parkinson's disease affects visual skills, 
such as the ability to see contrast, and the speed of processing what is seen.

The study involved a driving simulation test taken by 67 people with mild to 
moderate Parkinson's disease and 51 healthy people about the same age. First 
they drove in good conditions, with clear skies. Then they drove in a foggy, 
low visibility situation, leading up to an intersection where another vehicle 
posed a crash risk.

More people with Parkinson's disease were unable to avoid the crash—76 percent 
versus 37 percent. Their reaction time was also longer—2.7 seconds compared to 
2.1 seconds. For those who crashed, those with Parkinson's were driving at an 
average speed of 49 mph at the time of the crash, compared to 39 mph for those 
who did not have Parkinson's.

"Our results suggest that a large proportion of drivers with Parkinson's 
disease may be at risk for unsafe driving in low visibility situations such as 
fog or twilight," said study author Ergun Uc, MD, of the University of Iowa in 
Iowa City and Veterans Affairs Medical Center of Iowa City, who is a member of 
the American Academy of Neurology.

Those with Parkinson's also had more instances where the car's wheels crossed 
over the center line or the shoulder line than people who did not have 
Parkinson's, and their performance worsened with the change from good to poor 
driving conditions.

Among those with Parkinson's disease, those who performed the worst on the 
driving test were those who had the lowest scores on tests of visual 
processing speed, motion perception, sensitivity to visual contrast and speed 
of movement.

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The study was supported by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders 
and Stroke and the National Institute on Aging.

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