Access to specialized care is essential for people with Parkinson´s disease (PD). Given the growing number of people with PD and the lack of general practitioners and neurologists, particularly in rural areas in Germany, specialized PD staff (PDS), such as PD nurse specialists and Parkinson Assistants (PASS), will play an increasingly important role in the care of people with PD over the coming years. PDS have several tasks, such as having a role as an educator or adviser for other health professionals or an advocate for people with PD to represent and justify their needs. PD nurse specialists have been established for a long time in the Netherlands, England, the USA, and Scandinavia. In contrast, in Germany, distinct PDS models and projects have been established. However, these projects and models show substantial heterogeneity in terms of access requirements, education, theoretical and practical skills, principal workplace (inpatient vs. outpatient), and reimbursement. This review provides an overview of the existing forms and regional models for PDS in Germany. PDS reimbursement concepts must be established that will foster an implementation throughout Germany. Additionally, development of professional roles in nursing and more specialized care in Germany is needed.
We could quantify the tetrahydroisoquinoline derivative salsolinol in urine of patients with Parkinson's disease and normal control subjects by means of high performance liquid chromatography and electrochemical detection. Urine levels of salsolinol were positively related to the homovanillic acid/3-O-methyl-dopa ratio in the cerebrospinal fluid that reflects dopamine metabolism. In the patient group with visual hallucinations, mean salsolinol level was significantly increased to almost the 3-fold of those found in patients without hallucinations. Since the daily L-dopa doses of both patient groups were nearly identical this result is not due to different L-dopa medications. Additionally, either high values of the main serotonin metabolite, 5-hydroxyindole acetic acid (HIAA) or the L-dopa/3-O-methyl-dopa ratio were found in cerebrospinal fluid of patients with hallucinations. The enhanced salsolinol levels in patients with visual hallucinations seem to be due to an overloaded dopaminergic pathway with an imbalance between dopaminergic and serotonergic systems. Thus, salsolinol appears as a predictor for hallucinosis in Parkinson's disease.
Although our understanding of Parkinson’s disease (PD) has improved and effective treatments are available, caring for people with PD remains a challenge. The large heterogeneity in terms of motor symptoms, nonmotor symptoms, and disease progression makes tailored individual therapy and individual timing of treatment necessary. On the other hand, only limited resources are available for a growing number of patients, and the high quality of treatment cannot be guaranteed across the board. At this point, networks can help to make better use of resources and improve care. The working group PD Networks and Integrated Care, part of the German Parkinson Society, is entrusted to convene clinicians, therapists, nurses, researchers, and patients to promote the development of PD networks. This article summarizes the work carried out by the working group PD Networks and Integrated Care in the development of standards of network care for patients with PD in Germany.
In earlier studies the tetrahydroisoquinoline derivative N-methyl-norsalsolinol (2-MDTIQ) was discovered in lumbar cerebrospinal fluid and brain of patients with Parkinson's disease. To establish whether 2-MDTIQ is toxic to the dopaminergic system, 2-MDTIQ or 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) were stereotactically injected into the left medial forebrain bundle, and rotational behaviour and neurochemical changes were measured in female Wistar rats. Three weeks after lesioning rotational behaviour was assessed after administration of S(+)-amphetamine (5 mg/kg) and apomorphine (0.1 mg/kg). As expected, after 6-OHDA lesions S(+)-amphetamine as well as apomorphine markedly induced rotations ipsiversive or contraversive, respectively, to the lesion, and dopamine and 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC) levels of the ipsilateral caudate-putamen and accumbens nucleus decreased. Although a decline in the dopamine/DOPAC ratio indicated an enhanced dopamine turnover, striatal monoamine oxidase (MAO) activity remained unchanged when tested in vitro. After a 2-MDTIQ lesion S(+)-amphetamine also caused animals to rotate strongly, ipsiversive to the lesion, but there was no response to apomorphine administration. This 2-MDTIQ effect was not due to a reduction in dopamine metabolism of the ipsilateral caudate-putamen or mesencephalic structures, or, for example, a partial neurodegeneration of dopaminergic neurons, since dopamine metabolites levels and MAO activity were nearly unchanged. Thus, we suggest that 2-MDTIQ interacts with the effect of S(+)-amphetamine and probably leads to an insensitivity of the dopamine uptake/transporter system to S(+)-amphetamine in dopaminergic nigrostriatal neurons. An effect of 2-MDTIQ on presynaptic membranes of dopaminergic synaptosomes has never been reported, but will be an objective of our further studies.
Interdisciplinary care has been shown to be effective at optimizing the treatment of patients with Parkinson’s disease. An optimized collaboration between the various healthcare providers involved in the treatment process facilitates successful care. One of the main shortcomings in the German healthcare system is the limited and unstandardized communication between practitioners. The Parkinson’s network Münsterland+ (PNM+) is an interdisciplinary network of medical and non-medical experts involved in the treatment of Parkinson’s patients: neurologists, physiotherapists, occupational therapists, speech therapists, psychologists, Parkinson’s nurses, pharmacists, patients, and relatives. The PNM+ elaborates guideline-based therapy recommendations, provided as so-called “Quickcards”. Thereby, the communication of the treating neurologist and therapists is based on a coordinated feedback system and suggestions to adequately select and, if necessary, adjust the therapy. In the German healthcare system, with its fragmented structures, the PNM+ and its activities have been shown to enhance integration of the healthcare providers and thereby optimize the care of Parkinson’s disease patients. Future research should evaluate the effects and cost-effectiveness.
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