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Neuropsychiatric symptoms in Parkinson's disease: aetiology, diagnosis and treatment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 February 2020

Shoned Jones
Affiliation:
MBBch, MRCP, is a specialist registrar in geriatric medicine, training at University Hospital of Wales, Cardiff, UK. She has developed a special interest in Parkinson's disease and wearable technologies.
Kelli M. Torsney
Affiliation:
BMedSci(Hons), MBBS, MRCP(UK), is an academic geriatric registrar in the John van Geest Centre for Brain Repair, Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Cambridge, UK, and is currently undertaking a PhD in clinical neurosciences at the university. Her research within the Wellcome Trust Medical Research Council Stem Cell Institute at the university focuses on models of ageing and translation research in Parkinson's disease.
Lily Scourfield
Affiliation:
A fourth-year medical student at Cardiff University and will intercalate in pharmacology next year. She has interests in medical research, movement disorders and prescribing, and edits the education section of the British Student Doctor Journal.
Katie Berryman
Affiliation:
BA(Cantab), MA(Cantab), MRes(Bris), completed a BA/MA at the University of Cambridge and has since worked as a trials coordinator and research associate in ageing and Parkinson's disease at Bristol Medical School.
Emily J. Henderson*
Affiliation:
MBChB, MRCP(UK), PhD, is a consultant geriatrician and honorary senior lecturer based at the Royal United Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Bath, and the University of Bristol, UK. She has a translational portfolio of research in ageing and Parkinson's disease, particularly focusing on phase II and III clinical trials and the interaction between gait and cognition.
*
Correspondence Emily J. Henderson. Email: Emily.Henderson@bristol.ac.uk
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Summary

Historically, Parkinson's disease was viewed as a motor disorder and it is only in recent years that the spectrum of non-motor disorders associated with the condition has been fully recognised. There is a broad scope of neuropsychiatric manifestations, including depression, anxiety, apathy, psychosis and cognitive impairment. Patients are more predisposed to delirium, and Parkinson's disease treatments give rise to specific syndromes, including impulse control disorders, dopamine agonist withdrawal syndrome and dopamine dysregulation syndrome. This article gives a broad overview of the spectrum of these conditions, describes the association with severity of Parkinson's disease and the degree to which dopaminergic degeneration and/or treatment influence symptoms. We highlight useful assessment scales that inform diagnosis and current treatment strategies to ameliorate these troublesome symptoms, which frequently negatively affect quality of life.

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Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2020
Figure 0

FIG 1 The spectrum of neuropsychiatric disorders in Parkinson's disease. Treatment-related syndromes are indicated in bold text.

Figure 1

FIG 2 Number of articles published with neuropsychiatric domain in the article title between 1970 and 2019.The PubMed search terms used were: (Parkinson*[Title]) AND (dementia[Title] OR cognitive impairment[Title]); parkinson*“[Title] AND ”depression“[Title]; parkinson*”[Title] AND (“psychosis”[Title] OR “hallucination”[Title]); (Parkinson*[Title]) AND (impulse control disorder[Title] OR dopamine dysregulation syndrome[Title]); parkinson*“[Title] AND impulse control disorder”[Title] OR “dopamine dysregulation syndrome”[Title]; (Parkinson*[Title]) AND (impulse control disorder[Title] OR dopamine dysregulation syndrome[Title]); (Parkinson*[Title]) AND (anxiety[Title]); (Parkinson*[Title]) AND (apathy[Title]); (Parkinson*[Title]) AND (insomnia[Title] OR sleepiness[Title] OR fatigue[Title] OR REM[Title]) filtered from 1970–2019.

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