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Medical Journal of Australia 1991-Sep

Sublingual apomorphine solution in Parkinson's disease.

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P K Panegyres
S J Graham
B K Williams
B M Higgins
J G Morris

Keywords

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

To compare the effects of single doses of oral levodopa, subcutaneous apomorphine and sublingual apomorphine.

METHODS

Single-blind placebo-controlled comparative study.

METHODS

Subjects were admitted as day patients to the neurology ward.

METHODS

Five patients with idiopathic Parkinson's disease and "end of dose deterioration" entered and completed the study.

METHODS

Patients were given domperidone (20 mg by mouth three times a day) to prevent nausea and apomorphine (1-3 mg by subcutaneous injection), apomorphine in glycerol (10-30 mg sublingually) or their usual levodopa regimen.

METHODS

Efficacy, time to onset of effect and duration of effect of oral levodopa, subcutaneous apomorphine and sublingual apomorphine. Tremor amplitude and timed pegboard and gait tasks were used as objective indices of clinical state.

RESULTS

Maximal efficacy of the three treatments was comparable (P = 0.28-0.99). Mean latency to onset of effect of both formulations of apomorphine was less than that of levodopa (P = 0.022-0.048) but so was the duration of effect (P = 0.044-0.049).

CONCLUSIONS

Sublingual apomorphine may be a convenient means of rapidly terminating "off" periods associated with long term levodopa therapy.

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