Print

Print


Would someone interpret the meaning of the below to me in view of my
question posted today re increase of Sinemet?


  >>>>>I had been taking 3/4 10/100 reg. Sinemet every 2 hrs., with
added 1/2
  Sinemet CR at bedtime.  I then increased all this to 1 tablet every 2
  hrs, & 3/4 CR at bedtime.  This seems to now meet my needs.  Perhaps
my
  needs increased because of the increased stress due to my husband's
  cancer recurring & becoming incurable.

  As a general question, does increasing Sinemet more quickly increase
the
  need for future increases?  I don't know how to ask this question;
  something like "priming the pump".<<<<<<<



janet paterson wrote:

  Loss of long-duration response to levodopa over time in PD:
  implications for wearing-off.

  OBJECTIVE: To determine the modifications of the long-duration
response to
  levodopa in PD over a 1-year period.

  BACKGROUND: The development of predictable motor fluctuations in PD
has
  been attributed mainly to modifications over time of the
short-duration
  response to levodopa, whereas the role of the long-duration response
has
  not been widely investigated.

  METHODS: In 17 patients with PD the authors examined prospectively
both the
  short-duration response and the long-duration response to levodopa
under
  standardized conditions on two different occasions separated by a
period of
  approximately 1 year (11.7 +/- 3.6 months).

  RESULTS: At the end of the follow-up period, the short-duration
response
  increased in magnitude but did not change significantly in duration.

  A total of 24% of patients lost the long-duration response 1 year
after
  their first examination, but a sustained long-duration response could
be
  reestablished by shortening the interdose interval for levodopa
intake.

  Moreover, the duration of the long-duration response after
discontinuation
  of treatment became significantly shorter during 1 year.

  CONCLUSION: Modifications of the long-duration response may have a
pivotal
  role in generating a fluctuating response, and suggest that
therapeutic
  strategies based on maintenance of the long-duration response should
be
  sought to avoid the appearance of motor fluctuations.

  Neurology 1999 Mar 10;52(4):763-7
  Zappia M, Oliveri RL, Montesanti R, Rizzo M, Bosco D, Plastino M,
Crescibene
  L, Bastone L, Aguglia U, Gambardella A, Quattrone A
  Institute of Neurology, University of Catanzaro, Italy.

  PMID: 10078724, UI: 99176610
  http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PubMed/

  janet paterson
  52 now / 41 dx / 37 onset
  PO Box 171  Almonte  Ontario  K0A 1A0  Canada
  a new voice <http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Village/6263/>
  [log in to unmask]