parkinson’s disease is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder affecting one in 500 canadians .
but many people with parkinson’s disease also report troubling non-motor symptoms . these include depression, anxiety, psychosis, cognitive impairment, and addiction. these symptoms can be due to progression of the disease more widely within the brain, or can be side effects of treatment.
in our recently published research , we looked at why many people with parkinson’s disease develop impulsivity (the tendency to act recklessly on the spur of the moment) and addictive behaviours, such as problem gambling or sex addiction.
after diagnosis, the vast majority of people with parkinson’s disease will take medication. the dose will generally increase over time as motor symptoms become more severe.
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about one in six people treated with this medication will develop impulsive and addictive behaviours . these behaviours can include problem gambling, a preoccupation with sex or pornography, compulsive shopping or binge eating.
people who experience this phenomenon commonly describe “losing control” and being “driven” to engage in these behaviours against their better judgement, and despite significant interpersonal, financial and legal harms.
we’ve known for some time about the association between dopamine and addictive behaviours. as well as facilitating movement in our bodies, dopamine contributes to the experience of pleasure, and plays a role in learning and memory — two key elements in the transition from liking something to becoming addicted to it.
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we took a group of 57 people with parkinson’s disease on dopaminergic medication and focused on two brain networks thought to be crucial for decision making: a network for choosing the best course of action and a network for stopping inappropriate actions. these networks connect regions of the brain within the frontal lobes, an area known to support higher-order features of personality such as judgement.
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we then compared behaviour in the virtual casino to the connectivity of the choosing and stopping networks, to see if there was an association.
for the most part, the greater the strength of the choosing network and the weaker the strength of the stopping network, the more impulsive participants were. that is, they had a greater tendency to behave recklessly in the casino environment by placing large bets, trying lots of different poker machines and making “double or nothing” gambles.
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addicted participants expressed impulsive gambling behaviour in the virtual casino, as we would have predicted. however, their brain structures suggested they would be conservative (that is, they had a weaker choosing network and a stronger stopping network). further, the size of the dose of dopaminergic medication didn’t appear to influence reckless behaviour in these individuals.
we could then select particular drugs in preference to others, or even bring forward advanced therapies such as deep brain stimulation , which treats motor symptoms with focused electricity rather than dopaminergic medication.
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