Apomorphine does not influence olfactory thresholds in Parkinson's disease.
Funct Neurol. 1998 Apr-Jun; 13(2):99-103.FN

Abstract

In order to verify the presumed dopaminergic basis of olfactory dysfunction in Parkinson's disease (PD), we studied olfactory functions in 12 PD patients (mean age 60.1 yrs, mean duration of PD 9.0 yrs, mean Hoehn and Yahr score 2.8) before and after apomorphine (APO) administration. Amylacetate (banana smell) in 12 sequential dilutions (in 50% steps) was used for the examination of olfactory thresholds. The testing showed no significant differences in any olfactory parameters before and after APO. Furthermore, when analysing the subgroup of 7 hyposmic PD patients, we also found no significant differences before and after APO. We therefore believe that olfactory dysfunction in PD is not dependent on dopamine deficiency.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Roth J
Clinic of Neurology, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic.
Radil T
No affiliation info available
Růzicka E
No affiliation info available
Jech R
No affiliation info available
Tichý J
No affiliation info available

MeSH

AgedApomorphineDopamine AgonistsHumansMiddle AgedMovementOlfactory PathwaysParkinson DiseaseSensory Thresholds

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

9626594