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Acute and Reversible Parkinsonism Due to Organophosphate Pesticide Intoxication, Five Cases
Neurol 52:1467-1471, Bhatt,M.H.,et al, 1999
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Article Abstract
All patients developed parkinsonism that resembled PD clinically except for poor response to levodopa. Three genetically related patients were exposed to pesticides in a common environment before onset of parkinsonism; other family members remained unaffected. Other secondary causes of parkinsonism were excluded. Four patients recovered completely without treatment, and one patient was lost to follow-up. One patient experienced repeated episodes of parkinsonism with inadvertent reexposur e to a pesticide-contaminated environment. The clinical course of these five patients suggests their syndrome represents a heretofore undescribed toxic effect of OP pesticides. Our observations strengthen epidemiologic studies implicating OP pesticides in the etiology of PD. A genetic susceptibility to OP pesticide-induced parkinsonism may account for three family members developing this syndrome.
 
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insecticides
neurotoxin
Parkinson disease,acute onset
Parkinsonism syndrome
poison,neurologic problems with
poison,organophosphate
toxins,nervous system

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