Drug Treatment of Parkinson??s Disease in the 1990s: Achievements and Future Possibilities

1997 
Advances in the medical treatment of Parkinson’s disease have improved the disability related to complications of long term levodopa therapy, including motor fluctuations, dyskinesias and neuropsychiatric toxicity. A range of new dopamine agonists are in various stages of preclinical and clinical development. Cabergoline appears to be effective in improving moderate motor fluctuations, and a number of dopamine partial agonists that can act as either agonists or antagonists depending on the degree of denervation and receptor sensitivity are being investigated. Apomorphine represents a significant advance in the treatment of well developed motor fluctuations in selected patients who are able to master the technique of subcutaneous administration. The catecholamine-O-methyl transferase inhibitors are proving useful in phase III studies in the management of patients with moderate motor fluctuations. A role for glutamate antagonists is supported by animal and early clinical data, although the poor therapeutic index associated with the currently available nonselective, noncompetitive glutamate antagonists has prompted a search for more selective antagonists with less toxicity.
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