| Literature DB >> 3978651 |
Abstract
Twenty Parkinson's disease patients, who had not yet received levodopa, were treated with low-dose bromocriptine. At a mean daily bromocriptine dose of 13.2 mg, 13 patients (65%) improved and had a 32% reduction in the combined score for tremor rigidity and bradykinesia. Adverse effects were frequent, and 25% of the patients were taken off the drug because of nausea or vomiting. After 30 months follow-up, only three patients continued on bromocriptine alone. Ten patients were eventually maintained on low-dose bromocriptine and levodopa-carbidopa, and a clear synergistic effect of bromocriptine in this drug combination was documented in eight patients. Low-dose bromocriptine does not replace levodopa as initial therapy for Parkinson's disease. The potential long-term benefit of the early use of combined low-dose levodopa-dopamine agonist therapy needs to be further studied.Entities:
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Year: 1985 PMID: 3978651
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Neuropharmacol ISSN: 0362-5664 Impact factor: 1.592