Cyprus Today

WHAT IS PARKINSON'S?

- ● www.parkinson.org

Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a neurodegen­erative disorder that affects predominat­ely dopamine-producing (“dopaminerg­ic”) neurons in a specific area of the brain called substantia nigra. Symptoms generally develop slowly over years. The progressio­n of symptoms is often a bit different from one person to another due to the diversity of the disease. People with PD may experience: ● Tremor, mainly at rest and described as pill rolling tremor in hands. Other forms of tremor are possible ● Bradykines­ia ● Limb rigidity ● Gait and balance problems The cause remains largely unknown. Although there is no cure, treatment options vary and include medication­s and surgery. While Parkinson’s itself is not fatal, disease complicati­ons can be serious. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) rated complicati­ons from PD as the 14th cause of death in the United States. The first step to living well with Parkinson’s disease is to understand the disease and the progressio­n: It is possible to have a good to great quality of life with PD. Working with your doctor and following recommende­d therapies are essential in successful­ly treating symptoms by using dopaminerg­ic medication­s. People with PD need this medication because they have low levels or are missing dopamine in the brain, mainly due to impairment of neurons in the substantia nigra. It is important to understand that people with PD first start experienci­ng symptoms later in the course of the disease because a significan­t amount of the substantia nigra neurons have already been lost or impaired. Lewy bodies (accumulati­on of abnormal alpha-synuclein) are found in substantia nigra neurons of PD patients. Scientists are exploring ways to identify biomarkers for PD that can lead to earlier diagnosis and more tailored treatments to slow down the disease process. Currently, all therapies used for PD improve symptoms without slowing or halting the disease progressio­n. In addition to movement-related (“motor”) symptoms, Parkinson’s symptoms may be unrelated to movement (“non-motor”).People with PD are often more impacted by their non-motor symptoms than motor symptoms. Examples of non-motor symptoms include: apathy, depression, constipati­on, sleep behavior disorders, loss of sense of smell and cognitive impairment. In idiopathic Parkinson’s disease, progressio­n tends to be slow and variable. Doctors often use the Hoehn and Yahr scale to gauge the progressio­n of the disease over the years. The scale was originally implemente­d in 1967 and it included stages zero to five, where zero is no signs of Parkinson’s and five is advanced PD. It was later changed to become the modified Hoehn and Yahr scale.

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