Management of Pain in Parkinson's Disease

Related Research units

Abstract

Pain is a very frequent symptom with influence on the quality of life in Parkinson's disease (PD), but is still under diagnosed and commonly treated only unsystematically. Pain etiology and pain character are often complex and multi causal, and data regarding treatment recommendations are limited. Pain can be primarily related to PD but frequently it is associated with secondary diseases, such as arthrosis of the spine or joints. However, even basically PD-unrelated pain often is amplified by motor- or non-motor PD symptoms, such as akinesia or depression. Beyond an optimization of anti-parkinsonian treatment, additional pain treatment strategies are usually needed to properly address pain in PD. A careful pain history and diagnostic work-up is essential to rate the underlying pain pathophysiology and to develop a targeted therapeutic concept. This review gives an overview on how pain is treated in PD patients and how patients assess the effectiveness of these therapies; here, the manuscript focuses on pathophysiology-driven suggestions for a multimodal pain management in clinical practice.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN1877-7171
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2020
PubMed 32568113