Adjust Text Size:change font sizechange font sizechange font sizechange font sizechange font sizechange font size

Educational Materials

   publications

Do you need information about Parkinson's? PDF's educational materials provide information about symptoms, medications, local resources and more.

Order Free Educational Publications Today

*New Resource List*

 Parkinson's Disease Resource List logo

The PD Resource List includes over 650 resources to address the needs of people living with PD.

Order a Free Copy Now

Featured Creativity and Parkinson's Artist

Donald Abrams

See Artist's Work

View the Gallery:


Science News

Relatives of Parkinson's Patients at Higher Psychiatric Risk

The close relatives of people with Parkinson's disease are at increased risk for depression and anxiety disorders, new research suggests.

The risk is particularly high in the brothers, sisters, parents and children of people who develop Parkinson's before age 75, said a team from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.

The study included 1,000 immediate relatives of 162 Parkinson's patients and 850 immediate relatives of 147 people without Parkinson's. It's the first large population-based study to identify this kind of association.

"Studies by our group and others have shown that relatives of patients with Parkinson's disease have an increased risk of Parkinson's disease. Recently, we showed they also have increased risk of essential tumor and of cognitive impairment or dementia. However, the risk of psychiatric disorders was unknown," senior author Dr. Walter Rocca, a neurologist and epidemiologist, said in a prepared statement.

"Because many patients with Parkinson's disease develop anxiety and depression after and even before the onset of the disease, we explored whether this tendency was present to a greater extent in family members of people with Parkinson's disease compared with people without the disease. We found that, indeed, relatives of patients with Parkinson's disease are at increased risk for anxiety and depressive disorders, which suggests a genetic or other relationship between those disorders and Parkinson's disease," Rocca said.

Further research is needed to determine the exact cause or causes that boost the risk, he said.

The study was published in the December issue of the journal Archives of General Psychiatry.

Source Date: Dec 06 2007
Source Publication: HealthDay News
View source URL