A conditioned response as a measure of impulsive-compulsive behaviours in Parkinson's disease

Parkinson's Disease patients wore a device on the wrist that gave reminders to take levodopa and also measured bradykinesia and dyskinesia. Consumption of medications was acknowledged by placing the thumb on the device. Some patients performed this acknowledgement repeatedly and unconsciously....

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2014-02, Vol.9 (2), p.e89319-e89319
Hauptverfasser: Evans, Andrew H, Kettlewell, Jade, McGregor, Sarah, Kotschet, Katya, Griffiths, Robert I, Horne, Malcolm
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Kettlewell, Jade
McGregor, Sarah
Kotschet, Katya
Griffiths, Robert I
Horne, Malcolm
description Parkinson's Disease patients wore a device on the wrist that gave reminders to take levodopa and also measured bradykinesia and dyskinesia. Consumption of medications was acknowledged by placing the thumb on the device. Some patients performed this acknowledgement repeatedly and unconsciously. This study examines whether this behaviour reflected increased impulsivity. Twenty five participants were selected because they had i) excess acknowledgements described above or ii) Impulsive-Compulsive Behaviours or iii) neither of these. A blinded assessor applied clinical scales to measure Impulsive-Compulsive Behaviours, cognition, depression, anxiety and apathy. A Response Ratio, representing the number of acknowledgements/number of doses (expressed as a percentage) was tightly correlated with ratings of Impulsive-Compulsive Behaviours (r² = 0.79) in 19/25 subjects. Some of these patients had dyskinesia, which was higher with extraneous responses than with response indicating medication consumption. Six of the 25 subjects had high Impulsive-Compulsive Behaviour Scores, higher apathy scores, low levels of dyskinesia and normal Response Ratios. Patients without ICB (low RR) also had low dyskinesia levels regardless of the relevance of the response. An elevated Response Ratio is a specific measure of a type of ICB where increased incentive salience is attributed to cues by the presence of high striatal dopamine levels, manifested by high levels of dyskinesia. This study also points to a second form of ICBs which occur in the absence of dyskinesia, has normal Response Ratios and higher apathy scores, and may represent prefrontal pathology.
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Consumption of medications was acknowledged by placing the thumb on the device. Some patients performed this acknowledgement repeatedly and unconsciously. This study examines whether this behaviour reflected increased impulsivity. Twenty five participants were selected because they had i) excess acknowledgements described above or ii) Impulsive-Compulsive Behaviours or iii) neither of these. A blinded assessor applied clinical scales to measure Impulsive-Compulsive Behaviours, cognition, depression, anxiety and apathy. A Response Ratio, representing the number of acknowledgements/number of doses (expressed as a percentage) was tightly correlated with ratings of Impulsive-Compulsive Behaviours (r² = 0.79) in 19/25 subjects. Some of these patients had dyskinesia, which was higher with extraneous responses than with response indicating medication consumption. Six of the 25 subjects had high Impulsive-Compulsive Behaviour Scores, higher apathy scores, low levels of dyskinesia and normal Response Ratios. Patients without ICB (low RR) also had low dyskinesia levels regardless of the relevance of the response. An elevated Response Ratio is a specific measure of a type of ICB where increased incentive salience is attributed to cues by the presence of high striatal dopamine levels, manifested by high levels of dyskinesia. This study also points to a second form of ICBs which occur in the absence of dyskinesia, has normal Response Ratios and higher apathy scores, and may represent prefrontal pathology.</abstract><cop>United States</cop><pub>Public Library of Science</pub><pmid>24586685</pmid><doi>10.1371/journal.pone.0089319</doi><tpages>e89319</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Aged
Anxiety
Anxiety - drug therapy
Anxiety - physiopathology
Apathy - drug effects
Apathy - physiology
Balances (scales)
Biology
Cognition
Compulsive Behavior - drug therapy
Compulsive Behavior - physiopathology
Conditioned response
Conditioning
Conditioning (Psychology) - drug effects
Conditioning (Psychology) - physiology
Cues
Depression - drug therapy
Depression - physiopathology
Disruptive, Impulse Control, and Conduct Disorders - drug therapy
Disruptive, Impulse Control, and Conduct Disorders - physiopathology
Dopamine
Drug dosages
Drugs
Dyskinesia
Dyskinesias - drug therapy
Dyskinesias - physiopathology
Emotional behavior
Humans
Hypokinesia - drug therapy
Hypokinesia - physiopathology
Impulsive behavior
Impulsive Behavior - drug effects
Impulsive Behavior - physiology
L-dopa
Levodopa
Levodopa - therapeutic use
Medical research
Medicine
Mental depression
Middle Aged
Movement disorders
Neostriatum
Neurobiology
Neurodegenerative diseases
Neurosciences
Parkinson Disease - drug therapy
Parkinson Disease - physiopathology
Parkinson's disease
Patients
Psychiatry
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Weights and Measures
Wrist
title A conditioned response as a measure of impulsive-compulsive behaviours in Parkinson's disease
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