Monday 23 June 2014

Psychoses: A new angle to Parkinsonism

Parkinson’s disease affects millions over the world and is not a pleasant experience for the patients and their families. Parkinson’s disease (PD) is one of the most debilitating neuro-degenerative disorders which occur because of gradual death of dopamine generating cells in substantia niagra (an area of the mid brain responsible in formation of dopamine neurotransmitter).
Initially, PD presents itself with some obvious, movement related deficits which include muscle rigidity, shaking and trembling, slowness in movement and drooping eyelids. Later on, as the disease progresses, it causes cognitive deficits (problems related to thinking, memory, judgement). Dementia is a dangerous psychiatric by-product of PD whereas Depression is one of the most common co-morbidities which is obviously related to the debilitation and loss of dopamine.




Neuro-cognitive deficits can be seen in early phases of PD which relate to difficulties in making judgment, slurred speech, strange thoughts and impaired mood. Patients often experience apathy and an inability to experience normal range of emotions. As the disease progresses, one can also not the visuo-spatial difficulties, memory impairments, impulse control disorders, hypersexuality and psychotic symptoms.
Medicines for PD include Levodopamine, the aim of which is to replace the lost dopamine in the brain. Co-adjunct treatment alongside Dopamine agonists are antidepressants and Pacitane. However, Pacitane in some cases is known to trigger delirium. An anti-depressant is also started alongside.
However, despite these medications, as PD advances, an individual may become more vulnerable to environmental stressors and these stressors combined with dopamine deficiency may cause psychotic reactions.







One of my patients with old ischemic heart disease was admitted for Angiography when I saw him. He maintained a good conversation despite the obviously visible tremors and mild hyperexcitability. Since he was already 82, I thought it was a normal reaction to hospitalization. The medical chart hadn’t mentioned anything about him being on Levodopamine or Pacitane.

He inquired about the procedure of angiography as any other patient would. However, after the angiography, his reaction changed markedly. He started showing irritability, became extra-sensitive to bodily symptoms and showed increased drowsiness. I still treated it as a normal, transient psychiatric reaction to hospitalization and the pain in the radial area to angiography.
However, on the third day, he developed severe psychosis. He started experiencing visual hallucinations and began responding to them. He saw his friends and people who weren’t present in the room inquiring after his health and started answering them.

Since he was in the ICU, I was left with no other option but to communicate with his grandson. The young boy then told me that his grandfather had been diagnosed with PD about one and a half months back but hadn’t adhered to medication which is the reason why the tremors still persisted.

I could suddenly see the block fitting in and the clouds suddenly started to disappear giving way to light. I could see that the old man’s psychotism was directly related to PD. He was shifted to the general ward from the ICU as he became haemodynamically more stable. The foley’s catheter, IV cannula and the monitor leads were removed. He felt much better and the presentation of psychoticism gradually decreased but not to the desired level.

His newly acquired psychiatric reaction was a matter of concern for his family members too. The only plan I, along with the admitting cardiologist could devise was to restart him on PD medications and revisit his neurophysician.

The possible prognosis is that we can expect the tremors, gait and psychiatric reactions to improve once the patient restarts on PD medications. The only way to know about his current state of well-being is nto wait until his next follow-up.