Print

Print


Doctors should question those with Parkinson's on cycling ability

Healthcare News
07/01/2011
Whether or not a Parkinson's patient is able to ride a bike could help doctors 
diagnose their specific condition, scientists claim.

Questioning patients on their ability to ride a bike could be a far more 
effective Parkinson's disease test than more expensive examinations, according 
to scientists.

Researchers from the Netherlands used brain imaging and other tests on 
patients with Parkinson's disease and also on those with atypical 
Parkinsonism.

When asked whether they were still able to ride a bicycle, only four per cent 
of those with standard Parkinson's said they were no longer able to while 52 
per cent of participants with atypical Parkinsonism said they could not.

Researchers wrote a letter published in the Lancet that said that the question 
of whether a patient could ride a bike or not could prove a "red flag" for 
clinicians.

"This skilled task is probably sensitive to subtle problems with balance or 
coordination, caused by the more extensive extranigral pathology in atypical 
parkinsonism," said the letter.

Meanwhile, researchers from the University of Texas Health Science Center have 
found that a drug used in the treatment of leukaemia could be used to slow the 
progression of Parkinson's disease.

----------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign-off Parkinsn send a message to: mailto:[log in to unmask]
In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn