3.8 Review

Do we need to redefine the advanced stage in Parkinson's disease?

Journal

REVISTA MEXICANA DE NEUROCIENCIA
Volume 22, Issue 4, Pages 152-158

Publisher

ACAD MEXICANA NEUROLOGIA
DOI: 10.24875/RMN.20000119

Keywords

Parkinson's disease; Advanced stage; Post-advanced stage; Dopaminergic symptoms; Non-dopaminergic symptoms

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Identifying the advanced stage in Parkinson's disease is crucial for shifting to device-aided therapies. The key factors include inadequate control of both motor and non-motor dopaminergic symptoms, as well as the patient's judgment on response to traditional therapy. Early identification of this phase is important for maintaining patient's functional state.
Identifying the advanced stage in Parkinson's disease ( PD) is crucial for shifting from conventional to device-aided therapies. The criteria to define the onset of advanced PD have been based on lengthy and disabling daily off-times, troublesome dyskinesia and complex therapeutic regimes, but have also included invalidating non-dopaminergic symptoms, such as dementia, falls or dysphagia. These last problems usually appear in a much later stage of the advanced PD. The key to the definition of advanced PD should be the lack of adequate PD control of both motor and non-motor dopaminergic symptoms. The patient's judgment about the quality of their response to conventional therapy is also critical to establish the advanced stage. The early identification of this phase allows maintaining the patient's functional state whenever appropriate treatments are applied. We should keep the term advanced stage when the dopaminergic symptoms responsive to device-aided therapy are preponderant. When invalidating non-dopaminergic symptoms dominate the clinical picture, the term post-advanced stage could be more suitable.

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