Utility of transcranial sonography in the diagnosis of drug-induced parkinsonism: a prospective study.
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Wiley
Date
2013-11Referencia bibliográfica
Olivares Romero J, Arjona Padillo A, Barrero Hernández FJ, Martín González M, Gil Extremera B. Utility of transcranial sonography in the diagnosis of drug-induced parkinsonism: a prospective study. Eur J Neurol. 2013 Nov;20(11):1451-8. doi: 10.1111/ene.12131. PMID: 23879527.
Abstract
Background and purpose: Drug-induced parkinsonism usually resolves after discontinuation
of the causative agent. However, it persists in some patients, who actually
have subclinical neurodegenerative parkinsonism. Identification of this condition is
important because these patients could benefit from therapeutic measures. The
objective of this study was to prove whether transcranial sonography, a technique
used in the diagnosis of neurodegenerative parkinsonism, can be used for the said
identification.
Methods: In this prospective study, patients with drug-induced parkinsonism were
followed for at least 6 months after discontinuation of the causative drug and performance
of blinded transcranial sonography. Patients were categorized as having
iatrogenic parkinsonism if the clinical presentation had resolved or subclinical drugexacerbated
parkinsonism if it persisted. Once the patient was classified into one of
the two groups, an expert assessed the transcranial sonography findings and their
agreement with the clinical diagnosis.
Results: Twenty patients composed the group for analysis of results. Assessing hyperechogenicity
in the substantia nigra >20 mm2 and/or hyperechogenic lentiform
nucleus, differences were detected between the iatrogenic parkinsonism and the subclinical
drug-exacerbated parkinsonism groups, although they did not reach statistical
significance (Fisher’s exact test 0.09). Joint assessment of sonographic alterations in
both structures had a negative predictive value of 85.7% for diagnosis of drug-induced
parkinsonism, with a negative likelihood ratio of 0.3.
Conclusions: Although in our study statistically significant differences were not found
between the transcranial sonography characteristics of subclinical drug-exacerbated
parkinsonism and iatrogenic parkinsonism patients, we believe that transcranial
sonography is a valid technique for diagnosis of drug-induced parkinsonism.