Abstract

IntroductionBipolar Disorder (BD) has been suggested to be a risk factor for development of Parkinson Disease. Psychiatric drugs used as standard treatment of BD includes many drugs that are known to induce drug-induced parkinsonism (DIP).ObjectivesClinical differentiation between PD and DIP is a clinical and scientific crucial result. It might be aided by functional neuroimaging of the dopaminergic nigrostriatal pathway.MethodsTwenty consecutive BD patients with parkinsonism were clinically assessed and underwent 123I-ioflupane dopamine transporter SPECT. Imaging data of BD patients with pathological nigrostriatal pathway were further compared to a population of de-novo PD patients.ResultsFour BD patients had abnormal scans; they had higher putaminal binding ratio and putamen-to-caudate ratios than PD patients, despite similar motor symptom burden.Conclusionsin our initial results, up to 20% of BD patients with parkinsonism might have an underlying dopaminergic deficit, which is higher than excepted in the general population. This evidences supports that BD represents a risk factor for subsequent development of neurodegenerative parkinsonism.Disclosure of InterestNone Declared

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