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The <scp>L</scp>‐dopa on‐off effect in parkinson disease: Treatment by transient drug withdrawal and dopamine receptor resensitization

35

Citations

10

References

1978

Year

Abstract

It has been suggested that patients with Parkinson disease partially compensate for neuron loss by developing denervation supersensitivity, and, if so, that prolonged levodopa (L-dopa) therapy might lead to desensitization. As a preliminary test of this hypothesis, and in order to study whether it was possible to "resensitize" a patient who had already presumably been desensitized by previous L-dopa therapy, a patient who had become unpredictably responsive to L-dopa was investigated. The patient had been taking L-dopa for eight years and had exhibited severe dyskinesia-akinesia oscillation ("on-off" phenomenon) before the study. There was no consistent response to his hourly doses of Prolopa (L-dopa and benserazide in a 4:1 ratio). He was first lowered, over 33 days, to 20% of his original Prolopa dose. The dosage was then increased until a consistent response was observed. The three main results achieved were, first, overall reduction by 64% of the daily requirement for L-dopa; second, conversion from a previously unpredictable to a predictable response to each dose of L-dopa; and, third, change in his movement fluctuations to a pattern more typical of "end-of-dose" akinesia than the "on-off" phenomenon. The results support the idea of dopamine receptor resensitization upon reduction of the L-dopa dosage.

References

YearCitations

1976

660

1978

453

1974

230

1977

147

1976

116

1976

58

1978

51

1974

38

1977

36

1975

25

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