4.2 Article

Levodopa and executive performance in Parkinson's disease:: A randomized study

Journal

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S1355617708081010

Keywords

cognition; dopamine; frontal lobe; basal ganglia; neuropsychology; neuropsychological tests

Funding

  1. Fondo de Investigaciones Sanitarias [PI051916]
  2. Centro de Investigaciones Biomedicas en Red-Enfermedades Neurodegenerativas (CIBERNED)

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Parkinson's disease (PD) patients may experience fluctuations in executive performance after oral levodopa (LD). Their relationship with the pharmacokinetic profile of LD and with distinct cognitive processes associated with frontal-basal ganglia circuits is not well understood. In this randomized, double-blind, crossover study we plotted acute cognitive changes in 14 PD patients challenged with faster (immediate-release, IR) versus slower (controlled-release, CR) increases in LD plasma concentrations. We monitored motor status, LD plasma levels, and performance on four tasks of executive function (Wisconsin Card Sorting Test-WCST, Sternberg test, Stroop and Tower of Hanoi), 1 hr before and over + 6 hr after IR and CR-LD dose. Analysis of variance demonstrated significant but divergent changes in the Sternberg (6-digit but not 2- and 4-digit) test: improvement after CR-LD and worsening after IR-LD. Marginal improvement (p = .085) was observed with CR-LD in the WCST. while no significant differences were seen for the Stroop or Tower of Hanoi tests. Executive-related performance after LD challenge may differ depending on the LD tirne-to-peak plasma concentration and specific task demands. A slower rise in LD levels appears to have a more favorable impact on more difficult working memory tests. These results require replication to determine their generalization.

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