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Depression in Parkinson's disease:
impediments to recognition and treatment options.

By some estimates, nearly half of patients with PD also suffer depression.

Because features of PD frequently overlap with typical manifestations of
major affective disorder (or mild dysthymia), both diagnosis and treatment
of this comorbidity are challenging.

Some of these interactive features include cognitive and speech deficits
and impairments in emotional expression (e.g., PD-related facial masking)
or processing.

Parkinsonian depression probably is caused by an independent abnormality
rather than as a maladaptive response to disease, in that the degree of
depression is not correlated with PD severity.

Prognostically, depressive features (e.g., introversion, inflexibility) may
represent a subtle premorbid state heralding the onset of PD or an
accelerated cognitive decline thereafter.

Therapeutic mainstays for parkinsonian depression include psychosocial
counseling at the time of PD diagnosis (and during advanced stages of PD)
as well as appropriate medication regimens, the relative clinical efficacy
of which remain a matter of ongoing clinical inquiry: levodopa, dopamine
agonists, selegilene, tricyclic antidepressants, and selective serotonin
reuptake inhibitors).

This review formulates a rational treatment algorithm to assist in clinical
management of parkinsonian depression, an enormously complex clinical entity.


Neurology 1999;52(7 Suppl 3):S2-6
Poewe W, Luginger E
Department of Neurology, University of Innsbruck, Austria.
PMID: 10227602, UI: 99242141
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/

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janet paterson   52 now 41 dx 37 onset  [log in to unmask]
613-256-8340   PO Box 171  Almonte  Ontario  K0A 1A0  Canada
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