Parkinson’s Disease

Topic Notes

Parkinson’s Disease: Key Pharmacology & Pathophysiology

SectionHighlights
Physiology• Basal ganglia circuitry—direct (Go) vs indirect (No‑Go) pathways.
• Dopaminergic neurons in substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) project to striatum, modulating movement.
Pathophysiology• Selective loss of SNc dopaminergic neurons → ↓striatal dopamine, ↑calcium‑permeable channels, oxidative stress, α‑synuclein aggregation.
• Result: over‑inhibition of the thalamus → hypokinesia, rigidity, tremor.
Therapeutic Targets• Restore dopaminergic tone (agonism, precursor, re‑uptake inhibition).
• Modulate non‑dopaminergic systems (cholinergic, serotonergic, glutamatergic, adenosinergic).
• Neuroprotection & disease‑modifying approaches (antioxidants, iron chelators).
Main Pharmacologic Classes
A. Dopaminergic TherapiesL‑DOPA (+peripheral decarboxylase blocker) – gold standard; ↓ motor complications if early & low‑dose.
Dopamine Agonists – pramipexole, ropinirole, rotigotine, aripiprazole; onset 30–90 min, longer action, lower dyskinesia risk.
COMT Inhibitors – entacapone, tolcapone (block L‑DOPA catechol-O‑methyltransferase); extend half‑life, reduce motor “off.”
MAO‑B Inhibitors – selegiline, rasagiline, safinamide; inhibit dopamine breakdown.
B. Adjunctive / Non‑Dopaminergic AgentsAmantadine (NMDA antagonist) – reduces dyskinesia.
Anticholinergics – trihexyphenidyl, benztropine; useful for rigidity/tremor (age‑limited).
Disulfiram‑like – selegiline (MAO‑B) cross‑reactivity.
Glutamatergic modulators – riluzole, N‑Methyl‑D‑aspartate blockers.
C. Emerging / Disease‑ModifyingGDNF/TGF‑β1 – neurotrophic factor trials (ongoing).
Stem‑cell therapies – intraparenchymal transplants.
Alpha‑synuclein antibodies – pride (anti‑synuclein) – early‑phase.
Common Adverse EffectsL‑DOPA: nausea, orthostatic hypotension, dyskinesia, hallucinations.
Dopamine Agonists: impulse control disorders, nausea, somnolence, orthostatic hypotension.
COMT Inhibitors: diarrhea, black urine, hepatotoxicity (tolcapone).
MAO‑B Inhibitors: mild orthostatic hypotension, seizures (rare), GI upset.

Quick Reference Table

DrugClassMechanismKey IndicationDose (Adult)Notes
L‑DOPA / CarbidopaPrecursor / DDC InhibitorConverts to dopamine in CNS; carbidopa blocks peripheral decarboxylation.Motor symptoms (early & advanced).100–200 mg / 25 mg (2–5 × day).1–5 mg/kg/day.
PramipexoleDopamine agonist (D3> D2)Partial agonist at D2‑like receptors.Off‑time, tremor.0.125 mg‑8 mg (3 × day).Taper for withdrawal.
EntacaponeCOMT inhibitorBlocks peripheral/neuronal O‑methylation of L‑DOPA.Off‑time, motor fluctuations.200 mg × 3 × day.Black urine – inform patient.
SelegilineMAO‑B inhibitorInhibits monoamine oxidase B enzyme.Early disease, adjunct.1 mg × 1 × day (low dose); 10–15 mg × 1 × day (standard).Low dose safe with L‑DOPA.
AmantadineNMDA antagonistReduces glutamate‑mediated excitotoxicity.Dyskinesia, akinesia.100‑200 mg × 2 × day.Avoid at high dose in renal insuff.
TrihexyphenidylAnticholinergicBlocks muscarinic receptors.Rigidity, tremor.1 mg × 3–4 × day.Anticholinergic side‑effects ↑ in elderly.

Pharmacologic Decision Points

Patient FactorPreferred First‑LineWhy
Early PD (mild symptoms)Low‑dose L‑DOPA + carbidopa ± MAO‑B inhibitorSimple, reversible, benefits <5 yrs with low dose.
Young, high activityDopamine agonists firstDelays L‑DOPA complications.
Significant motor fluctuationsL‑DOPA + COMT inhibitorProlongs ON time.
Elderly with tremor/rigidityAnticholinergic + L‑DOPABenefit outweighs cognitive risk.
Dyskinesia predominantAmantadine or switch to dopaminergic agonistDirect antidyskinetic effect.

Key References (for quick citation)

1. Kalia LV, Lang AE. Parkinson’s disease. Lancet. 2015;386:896‑911.
2. Poewe W, et al. Diagnosis and treatment of Parkinson’s disease: a review. JAMA. 2018;319:1045‑1057.
3. Gerhardt DC, et al. Emerging therapies in Parkinson’s disease: a 2023 update. Mov Disord. 2023;38:1139‑1154.
4. Monginis G. L‑DOPA: a review of its pharmacology, clinical use, and adverse effects. Clin Pharmacol Ther. 2020;107:321‑333.

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