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Quantitative study of salivary secretion in Parkinson's disease. | LitMetric

Quantitative study of salivary secretion in Parkinson's disease.

Mov Disord

Departamento de Fisiología, Laboratorio de Neurofisiología, Facultad de Medicina, and Programa de Parkinson y Movimientos Anormales, Instituto de Neurociencias del Hospital de Clínicas, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Published: May 2006

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study assessed salivary flow rates and composition in 46 Parkinson's disease patients compared to 13 healthy controls, focusing on changes when patients were on and off dopaminergic medication.
  • Basal salivary flow was notably lower in PD patients when off medication, but increased with levodopa treatment, while citric acid also stimulated salivation more significantly in patients who had received domperidone.
  • Additionally, PD patients exhibited higher concentrations of sodium, chloride, and amylase in their saliva, which remained unchanged regardless of levodopa or domperidone treatment, indicating abnormal salivary composition in Parkinson's disease.

Article Abstract

We examined basal and reflex salivary flow rate and composition in 46 patients with Parkinson's disease (PD), both in off and on conditions, compared to 13 age-matched controls without underlying disease or treatment affecting autonomic function. Whole saliva was collected 12 hours after withdrawal of dopaminergic drugs and at the peak of levodopa-induced motor improvement. Twenty-three of the 46 PD patients had received domperidone a week before the study. Basal salivary flow rate was significantly lower in PD patients in the off state compared to controls (P<0.005). Levodopa increased salivary flow rate (P<0.05) both in the domperidone-pretreated and untreated groups. Citric acid stimulated salivary flow rate in both the off and on states in PD patients. This effect was higher in the domperidone-pretreated patients. Salivary concentration of sodium, chloride, and amylase was higher in PD patients than in controls and was not affected by levodopa or domperidone treatment. Levodopa stimulates both basal and reflex salivary flow rate in PD. The mechanism appears to be central, as the effect is not blocked by domperidone. Domperidone may have a peripheral effect that potentiates reflex salivary secretion. Salivary composition is abnormal in PD and is not affected by levodopa treatment.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mds.20784DOI Listing

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