“…It is known that most patients with Parkinson's dis ease have a normal or low blood pressure [1], In the 1960s, when levodopa was introduced for the treatment of Parkinson's disease, and also in the early 1970s, hypo tension was reported among the side effects of levodopa therapy of less than 1 year duration [2][3][4], Early in the treatment with levodopa, hypotension was considered a transient phenomenon [5], Little attention was paid thereafter to the effect of levodopa on resting blood pres sure, although extensive studies were done of reflex changes in blood pressure in response to standing, tilting and isometric exercise, as an index of cardiovascular reflexes, and also of the effect of levodopa on these reflex changes in blood pressure [6][7][8][9][10][11]. In fact, it is still unknown whether any hypotensive effect remains in patients on long-term levodopa.…”