Summary: A study involving 22 Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients demonstrated that the dopaminergic drug levodopa significantly improves sleep quality. When patients took levodopa, the number of nighttime awakenings decreased by 25%, and the time spent awake during the night fell by 30%. The study used wearable actigraphy devices to monitor sleep-wake patterns over four nights. Interestingly, while the actigraphy data indicated improved sleep, the patients themselves did not perceive a difference. The study highlights the importance of using objective measurements in clinical care for PD patients.
Key Takeaways:
- Levodopa Improves Sleep Quality in PD Patients: The study found that levodopa reduces the number of nighttime awakenings by 25% and decreases the time spent awake during the night by 30%, as measured by actigraphy.
- Discrepancy Between Objective and Subjective Sleep Quality: Although objective measurements showed improvements in sleep quality, Parkinson’s patients did not report feeling a difference, likely due to the disease’s impact on their perceptions, according to researchers. This underlines the necessity of objective monitoring in PD treatment.
- Clinical Implications for Parkinson’s Treatment: The study suggests that clinicians should consider administering levodopa before bedtime to improve sleep quality in PD patients, while also being aware of the potential side effects and the importance of objective data in evaluating treatment efficacy.
A study involving 22 Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients has shown that use of the dopaminergic drug levodopa improves sleep quality. When the patients took the drug, the number of times they woke up during the night fell 25%, and the amount of time they remained awake fell 30% on average.
The investigation was conducted with FAPESP’s support by researchers at São Paulo State University (UNESP) in Brazil and the University of Grenoble Alpes (UGA) in France. An article reporting the results is published in the Journal of Sleep Research.
Study Design and Results
The sleep-wake patterns of PD patients were monitored during four nights with the aid of a wearable actigraph, a wristwatch-like sensor that detects movement. The volunteers were evaluated for three nights after taking the drug and one without it.
Curiously, subjective information provided by the PD patients did not suggest any difference in sleep quality with and without the drug, in contrast with the actigraphy results.
“This was the first study to evaluate the effects of the drug on sleep quality in PD patients objectively [using equipment] and to compare them with the results reported subjectively. The actigraphic readings pointed to an improvement in sleep quality after the patients took the drug, although they themselves didn’t experience any benefit. This is important from the standpoint of clinical care. Clinicians should take these findings into account when deciding whether to administer levodopa to PD patients before they go to bed at night,” says Fábio Barbieri, PhD, last author of the article, in a release.
He heads the Human Movement Research Laboratory (MOVI-LAB) and runs a project called “Ativa Parkinson” offering patients physical activities on UNESP’s Bauru campus.
For Barbieri, the discrepancy between the objective and subjective results should not be a surprise. “The perceptions of PD patients are impaired by the disease. The number of waking episodes was 10 per night on average, so it’s understandable that they failed to report any improvement. That’s why it’s important to take the actigraphic measurements into consideration,” he says in a release.
PD and Sleep Distubrance
Levodopa and other dopaminergics are first-line therapeutics for motor symptoms of PD such as tremors and shaking at rest. There appears to be a link between these symptoms and nocturnal waking episodes since the dopaminergic system also plays a key role in sleep regulation. Substantial changes in dopamine levels are known to occur as the brain progresses through the sleep-wake cycle, for example.
Although dopaminergic medication may also improve sleep quality by reducing sleep onset latency and wakefulness in PD patients, there are documented reports of potential sleep disturbance exacerbation resulting from treatment with levodopa. It bears recalling that the drug should be used only when prescribed by a physician. Possible side effects include confusion, drowsiness, insomnia, nightmares, hallucinations, delusion, agitation, anxiety and euphoria.
According to Barbieri, about 90% of PD patients exhibit disturbances such as insomnia, daytime drowsiness, and restless legs syndrome, for example. Research has shown that sleep quality is associated with improved early morning mobility and cognition in PD patients.
“Hence the importance of our objective analysis using equipment. It was necessary to verify the impact of the drug on sleep realistically. We concluded that going to bed without the fourth dose was worse,” he says in a release.
Sleep and Mobility
Impairment of sleep quality is also associated with freezing of gait—a sudden inability to initiate or continue movement, often resulting in a fall, and one of the most incapacitating symptoms of PD.
In a systematic review of 20 studies, an international group of researchers found that PD patients wake up several times during the night, feel sleepy during the day, and have REM sleep behavior disorder. Rapid eye movement (REM) sleep plays a role in the maintenance of many cognitive processes.
Another study conducted by Barbieri and his group used artificial intelligence to estimate spatial and temporal gait parameters as a basis for precise clinical diagnosis and determining the stage reached in progression of the disease.
This latest study evaluated parameters such as step length, width, and velocity, as well as consistency (or width variability). The data is available online for use by other research groups.
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