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Prevalence and Clinical Correlates of Psychotic Symptoms in parkinson Disease
Arch Neurol 56:595-601, Aarsland,D.,et al, 1999
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Article Abstract
A total of 245 patients with PD were identified, 235 (95.9%) of whom participated in this study. Twenty-three patients (9.8%) had hallucinations with insight retained, and another 14 patients (6.0%) had more severe hallucinations or delusi ons. Psychotic symptoms were associated with age, stage and diagnostic subgroup of PD, severity of depression, and cognitive impairment. Type, duration, and dose of antiparkinson drug therapy did not differ between those patients with PD who had or did not have psychosis. In a polychotomous logistic regression analysis, severity of depression, cognitive impairment, and impairment of activities of daily living were the only significant concomitants of psychosis. Hallucinations and delusions are common in patients with PD. More advanced and wide-spread brain changes seem to increase the risk for developing psychosis in patients with PD receiving levodopa therapy.
 
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delusion
dementia
depression
hallucination
Parkinson disease
psychiatric disorder
psychiatric problems in neurologic disorders
psychosis
psychotic behavior

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