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Non-motor symptoms in early Parkinson’s disease: a 2-year follow-up study on previously untreated patients

Authors :
Carmine Vitale
Autilia Cozzolino
Paolo Barone
Giuseppe De Michele
Marina Picillo
Marianna Amboni
Maria Teresa Pellecchia
Marcello Moccia
Flavio Giordano
Anna De Rosa
Katia Longo
Roberto Erro
Erro, Roberto
Picillo, Marina
Vitale, C
Amboni, M
Moccia, Marcello
Longo, K
Cozzolino, A
Giordano, F
DE ROSA, Anna
DE MICHELE, Giuseppe
Pellecchia, MARIA TERESA
Barone, P.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Background Non-motor symptoms are very common among patients with Parkinson9s disease since the earliest stage, but little is known about their progression and their relationship with dopaminergic replacement therapy. Methods We studied non-motor symptoms before and after 2 years from dopaminergic therapy introduction in ninety-one newly diagnosed previously untreated PD patients. Results At baseline, nearly all patients (97.8%) referred at least one non-motor symptom. At follow-up, only few non-motor symptoms significantly changed. Particularly, depression and concentration became less frequent, while weight change significantly increased after introduction of dopamine agonists. Conclusions We reported for the first time a 2-year prospective study on non-motor symptoms before and after starting therapy in newly diagnosed PD patients. Even if non-motor symptoms are very frequent in early stage, they tend to remain stable during the early phase of disease, being only few non-motor symptoms affected from dopaminergic therapy and, specifically, by the use of dopamine agonists.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d329c47ba694b480612e769cdd70fed8