| Literature DB >> 17634109 |
Katherine A Grosset1, Donald G Grosset.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Medicine usage in Parkinson's disease patients is often imperfect, in particular irregular timing of medication. The effect of informing Parkinson's disease patients about the continuous dopaminergic hypothesis (to encourage regular medicine intake) on medication adherence and motor control was tested.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17634109 PMCID: PMC1931606 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2377-7-20
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Figure 1CONSORT diagram of study.
Patient baseline characteristics by group
| Pre-Intervention | Post-Intervention | |||
| Active (n = 33) | Control (n = 36) | Active (n = 23) | Control (n = 29) | |
| Males (%) | 62% | 51% | ||
| Age (years) | 61 (10) | 66 (13) | ||
| Prescribed levodopa (%) | 21 (62%) | 25 (71%) | 18 (78%) | 22 (76%) |
| Levodopa dose (mg) | 485 (252) | 538 (389) | 511 (306) | 670 (380) |
| Prescribed dopamine agonist (%) | 25 (74%) | 25 (71%) | 18 (78%) | 18 (62%) |
| Change in levodopa equivalent units | - | - | 51 (148) | 70 (149) |
| Number of PD drugs | 2.4 (1.1) | 2.4 (1.3) | 2.4 (1.2) | 2.2 (1.5) |
| Number of PD daily doses | 4.0 (2.5) | 4.0 (1.3) | 4 (0.8) | 4 (1.2) |
| Number of PD tablets per day | 9 (5) | 9.1 (5) | 9.5 (5) | 9 (5) |
| Number of non-PD drugs per day | 2.6 (3) | 2.9 (1.8) | 2.5 (3) | 3.5 (4) |
| Total number of tablets per day | 12 (5) | 12 (5) | 13 (7) | 12 (7) |
| Number of patients with carer | 6 (18%) | 7 (19%) | ||
| Duration of PD (years) | 7.5 (6) | 6.3 (4.1) | - | - |
| UPDRS 3 | 30 (12) | 24 (13) | 29 (14) | 28 (14) |
| Hoehn & Yahr | 2.4 (0.7) | 2.4 (0.7) | 2.5 (0.7) | 2.5 (0.7) |
| Schwab & England | 78 (10) | 76 (14) | 71 (18) | 73 (15) |
| MMSE | 28 (2) | 28 (2) | - | - |
| Geriatric depression score | 12 (6) | 10 (7) | - | - |
| PDQ SI | 30 (15) | 26.5 (18) | 36 (15) | 28 (14) |
| Timing adherence, median (IQ) | 17% (9–51) | 21% (10–59) | 39% (22–58) | 20% (10–47)* |
Data are mean (standard deviation) unless otherwise stated. PD = Parkinson's disease, UPDRS = Unified Parkinson's disease rating scale, MMSE = mini mental state examination, PDQ 39 SI = Parkinson's disease quality of life single index, IQ = interquartile range. *p = 0.007. There were no other significant differences between groups.
Figure 2Adherence (maximum, upper quartile, median, lower quartile and minimum) against number of daily doses of antiparkinson medication. Timing adherence was lower with increasing number of daily doses (p < 0.0001). Data are from 69 patients in the pre-intervention phase of the study.