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. 1996;103(4):421-32.
doi: 10.1007/BF01276418.

Salsolinol, catecholamine metabolites, and visual hallucinations in L-dopa treated patients with Parkinson's disease

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Salsolinol, catecholamine metabolites, and visual hallucinations in L-dopa treated patients with Parkinson's disease

A Moser et al. J Neural Transm (Vienna). 1996.

Abstract

We could quantify the tetrahydroisoquinoline derivative salsolinol in urine of patients with Parkinson's disease and normal control subjects by means of high performance liquid chromatography and electrochemical detection. Urine levels of salsolinol were positively related to the homovanillic acid/3-O-methyl-dopa ratio in the cerebrospinal fluid that reflects dopamine metabolism. In the patient group with visual hallucinations, mean salsolinol level was significantly increased to almost the 3-fold of those found in patients without hallucinations. Since the daily L-dopa doses of both patient groups were nearly identical this result is not due to different L-dopa medications. Additionally, either high values of the main serotonin metabolite, 5-hydroxyindole acetic acid (HIAA) or the L-dopa/3-O-methyl-dopa ratio were found in cerebrospinal fluid of patients with hallucinations. The enhanced salsolinol levels in patients with visual hallucinations seem to be due to an overloaded dopaminergic pathway with an imbalance between dopaminergic and serotonergic systems. Thus, salsolinol appears as a predictor for hallucinosis in Parkinson's disease.

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