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Review
. 2025 Feb;132(2):169-201.
doi: 10.1007/s00702-024-02846-3. Epub 2024 Oct 25.

Behavioral disorders in Parkinson disease: current view

Affiliations
Review

Behavioral disorders in Parkinson disease: current view

Kurt A Jellinger. J Neural Transm (Vienna). 2025 Feb.

Abstract

Patients with Parkinson disease (PD) frequently experience several behavioral symptoms, such as anxiety, apathy, irritability, agitation, impulsive control and obsessive-compulsive or REM sleep behavior disorders, which can cause severe psychosocial problems and impair quality of life. Occurring in 30-70% of PD patients, these symptoms can manifest at early stages of the disease, sometimes even before the appearance of classic motor symptoms, while others can develop later. Behavioral changes in PD show distinct patterns of brain atrophy, dopaminergic and serotonergic deterioration, altered neuronal connectivity in frontostriatal, corticolimbic, default mode and other networks due to a cascade linking molecular pathologies and deficits in multiple behavior domains. The changes suggest a multi-system neurodegenerative process in the context of a specific α-synucleinopathy inducing a variety of biochemical and functional changes, the neurobiological basis and clinical relevance of which await further elucidation. This paper is intended to review the recent literature with focus on the main behavioral disturbances in PD patients, their epidemiology, clinical features, risk factors, animal models, neuroimaging findings, pathophysiological backgrounds, and treatment options of these deleterious lesions.

Keywords: Anxiety; Apathy; Behavioral impairment; Brain network dysfunctions; Disinhibition; Impulse control disorder; Neuroimaging; Obsessive–compulsive symptoms; Parkinson disease; REM sleep behavior disorder.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declarations. Conflict of interest: The author declares that he has no conflict of interest.

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