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Management of Hypertension and Blood Pressure Dysregulation in Patients with Parkinson’s Disease—a Systematic Review
Purpose of Review The aim of this review article was to summarize the cardiovascular and blood pressure profile regarding Parkinson disease patients and to provide an update on the recent advancements in the field of the diagnosis and management of blood pressure abnormalities in these patients. Our...
Ausführliche Beschreibung
Purpose of Review The aim of this review article was to summarize the cardiovascular and blood pressure profile regarding Parkinson disease patients and to provide an update on the recent advancements in the field of the diagnosis and management of blood pressure abnormalities in these patients. Our goal was to guide physicians to avoid pitfalls in current practice while treating patients with Parkinson disease and blood pressure abnormalities. For this purpose, we searched bibliographic databases (PubMed, Google Scholar) for all publications published on blood pressure effects in Parkinson disease until May 2020. Furthermore, we highlight some thoughts and potential perspectives for the next possible steps in the field. Recent findings Blood pressure dysregulation in patients with Parkinson’s disease has several implications in clinical practice and presents an ongoing concern. Compared with chronic essential hypertension, the syndrome of combined neurogenic orthostatic hypotension and supine hypertension in Parkinson’s disease has received little attention. If left untreated, hypertension may lead to cardiovascular disease whereas hypotension may lead to fall-related complications, with tremendous impact on the quality of life of affected individuals. Summary The effect of blood Epressure control and the risk of death from cardiovascular disease in Parkinson disease are largely unexplored. Blood pressure abnormalities in Parkinson disease present bidirectional relationship and the rationale for treating and controlling hypertension in persons with Parkinson disease and concurrent neurogenic orthostatic hypotension and/or supine hypertension is compelling. Further research is warranted in order to clarify the mechanisms, clinical implications, and potential reversibility of compromised cardiovascular function, in persons with Parkinson disease. Ausführliche Beschreibung