Cause of death among patients with Parkinson's disease: a rare mortality due to cerebral haemorrhage
- 1 April 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Zeitschrift für Neurologie
- Vol. 237 (2) , 77-79
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00314665
Abstract
Causes of death, with special reference to cerebral haemorrhage, among 240 patients with pathologically verified Parkinson's disease were investigated using the Annuals of the Pathological Autopsy Cases in Japan from 1981 to 1985. The leading causes of death were pneumonia and bronchitis (44.1%), malignant neoplasms (11.6%), heart diseases (4.1%), cerebral infarction (3.7%) and septicaemia (3.3%). Cerebral haemorrhage was the 11th most frequent cause of death, accounting for only 0.8% of deaths among the patients, whereas it was the 5th most common cause of death among the Japanese general population in 1985. The low incidence of cerebral haemorrhage as a cause of death in patients with Parkinson's disease may reflect the hypotensive effect of levodopa and a hypotensive mechanism due to reduced noradrenaline levels in the parkinsonian brain.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Levodopa in Parkinson's disease: effect on mortalityActa Neurologica Scandinavica, 2009
- Hypotensive Effect of Long-Term Levodopa in Patients with Parkinson’s DiseaseEuropean Neurology, 1990
- Reduction in blood pressure in normal and spontaneously hypertensive rats by lergotrile mesylateJournal of Pharmacy and Pharmacology, 1979
- Pergolide: A potent dopaminergic antihypertensiveLife Sciences, 1979
- BROMOCRIPTINE AND HYPERTENSIONThe Lancet, 1976
- Mortality among Parkinson Patients Treated with L-Dopa Combined with a Decarboxylase InhibitorEuropean Neurology, 1976
- Arterial blood pressure in patients with Parkinson's diseaseJournal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, 1975
- Hypotension Caused by L-DopaBMJ, 1970
- EFFECTS OF L-DOPA IN PARKINSON'S DISEASEThe Lancet, 1969
- ParkinsonismNeurology, 1967