| Literature DB >> 30302392 |
Nataliya Titova1, Oleg Levin2, Elena Katunina1, K Ray Chaudhuri3,4.
Abstract
'Levodopa Phobia' is under-recognised in Parkinson's disease but can cause profound detrimental clinical complications if left to continue. Several types can be encountered in clinical practice and can be driven by a misplaced fear of levodopa-induced dyskinesias, other gastrointestinal side effects and also the theoretical notion that levodopa may be toxic to dopaminergic neurons in the brain. The condition can be underpinned by a sense of strong influence from the physicians or carers who are unwilling to prescribe or consider levodopa, and also high levels of anxiety or even impulsive compulsive traits in patients who have been influenced by available literature or social media-based information. If unrecognised, the clinical issue may lead to motor deterioration and related muscle contractures leading to social isolation as well as a range of non-motor symptoms. In some, there may be emergence of intrusive impulse control disorders because of reliance on only dopamine agonists related to the fear of taking levodopa. Four cases illustrate the different patterns of 'Levodopa Phobia' in this study. Management of levodopa phobia is complex and includes recognition and skilled neuropsychological interventions to break the misperceptions about the complications of levodopa therapy.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30302392 PMCID: PMC6168519 DOI: 10.1038/s41531-018-0067-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Parkinsons Dis ISSN: 2373-8057
Fig. 1Datscan of patient (case report 1) showing bilateral loss of dopamine transporter uptake. Courtesy Nuclear Imaging Department, Kings College Hospital, London
Proposed patterns of ‘Levodopa Phobia’ in Parkinson’s disease
| Type of subject and personality | Pattern of ‘Levodopa Phobia’ | Evidence base |
|---|---|---|
| Primary: patient based: | ||
| True ‘Levodopa Phobia’ (type 1) | Often associated with high anxiety states, misperception of medical data (media-based lay information on dyskinesias and side-effect profile of levodopa as provided in drug information leaflet) and complete aversion to levodopa use inspite of serious health-related consequences. | Case reports 2 and 3 |
| ‘Levodopa Phobia’ leading to poor compliance with prescribed levodopa (type 2) | Patients usually can be persuaded to start on levodopa but discontinues treatment or refuses to escalate the dose beyond a certain limit inspite of advice otherwise. Some could refrain from use of levodopa in secret as well. | Case report 2 |
| Secondary and extrinsic factors based: | ||
| Physician based | Usually related to misperception of knowledge of the potential risk of levodopa -induced dyskinesias. In addition, some may be influenced by data from animal models about the toxic effect of levodopa. | (Ref. [ |
| The tendency to avoid levodopa could be pronounced by local clinical guidelines espousing preferential use of ‘levodopa sparing’ therapies and peer group pressure. | ||
| Carer based | Carer attitude towards levodopa use is reflected by a negativity or complete aversion towards using levodopa in patients. | Case reports 1 and 4 |
Types of ‘Levodopa Phobia’ types and possible motor and non-motor complications
| Types of ‘Levodopa Phobia’ | Patterns of complications and clinical consequences |
|---|---|
| Complete ‘Levodopa Phobia’ | Severe akinesia causing lack of mobility |
| Contractures | |
| Respiratory tract infections | |
| Severe nociceptive pain | |
| Depression and anhedonia | |
| Social withdrawal and carer dependence | |
| Poor compliance and secret rejection of levodopa use | Report of lack of any effect of levodopa inspite of apparent use |
| Precipitation of unnecessary investigations for atypical ‘levodopa-resistant’ parkinsonism | |
| A tendency to seek multiple medical consultations owing to ‘lack of effect’ of therapy | |
| Possibility of development of impulse control disorders because of potential overuse of other (e.g., dopamine agonist) therapies |
Fig. 2A proposed management plan of the levodopaphobic patient. MDT multidisciplinary team, CBT ognitive behavioural therapy, DA dopamine agonist, ICD = impulse control disorder