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Parkinson’s Disease Psychosis

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Minor hallucinations occur in drug-naive Parkinson’s disease patients, even from the premotor phase

By Javier Pagonabarraga MD, PhD, Saul Martinez-Horta BSc, Ramón Fernández de Bobadilla BSc, Jesús Pérez MD, Roser Ribosa-Nogué MD, Juan Marín MD, Berta Pascual-Sedano MD, PhD, Carmen García BSc, PhD, Alexandre Gironell MD, PhD and Jaime Kulisevsky MD, PhD

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Objectives

The description of minor hallucinatory phenomena (presence, passage hallucinations) has widened the spectrum of psychosis in Parkinson’s disease (PD). Minor hallucinatory phenomena seem to antedate the development of more severe hallucinations. Early detection of minor hallucinations may be useful for screening patients with more severe endophenotypes. Motivated by the observation of “de novo,” drug-naive PD patients reporting minor hallucinations, we aimed to prospectively identify “de novo” untreated PD patients experiencing hallucinatory phenomena, and to compare their clinico-demographic characteristics with those of untreated PD patients without hallucinations and healthy controls.

Methods

Screening and description of psychosis was assessed by the Movement Disorders Society Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale—Part I and a structured interview covering all types of psychotic phenomena reported in PD. Clinical, neuropsychological, and demographic data of PD patients with and without psychotic phenomena were compared with those of age- and education-matched healthy controls.

Results

Fifty drug-naive, “de novo” PD patients and 100 controls were prospectively included. Minor hallucinations were experienced in 42% (21 of 50) PD patients and 5% controls (P < 0.0001). Coexistence of passage and presence hallucinations was the most common finding. Unexpectedly, 33.3% of patients with minor hallucinations manifested these as a pre-motor symptom, starting 7 months to 8 years before first parkinsonian motor symptoms. The presence of minor hallucinations was significantly associated with presence of rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder.

Conclusions

In this first study to prospectively analyze the frequency of minor hallucinatory phenomena in incident, untreated PD patients, hallucinations appeared as a frequent early non-motor symptom that may even predate the onset of parkinsonism.

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Filed Under: Research Article Tagged With: drug-naive, early untreated, hallucinations, Parkinson's disease, premotor, REM sleep behavior disorder

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This article collection was made possible by an unrestricted grant from

Acadia Pharmaceuticals

Movement DisordersMovement Disorders is the leading journal on Parkinson’s disease, neurodegenerative & neurodevelopmental disorders & abnormalities in motor control.

Edited By:
Jose A. Obeso, MD, PhD

Movement Disorders Clinical PracticeMovement Disorders Clinical Practice is an online-only journal committed to publishing high quality peer reviewed articles related to clinical aspects of movement disorders.

Edited By:
Kailash Bhatia, MD, DM, FRCP
Marcelo Merello, MD, PhD

Official journals of the

International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society

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