
Causes of Dyskinesia
Dyskinesia typically occurs as a complication of long-term levodopa use. Additional factors that may contribute to dyskinesia include a younger age at diagnosis and the use of higher doses of levodopa for extended periods of time.
Exactly why dyskinesia develops is not well understood, but researchers believe different brain chemicals, such as serotonin, glutamate and dopamine, play a role. Fluctuating levels of dopamine in particular are thought to play a role. In Parkinson’s, the brain cells that make dopamine are lost, so dopamine levels decrease. Levodopa temporarily restores dopamine, but because it has to be taken several times per day, dopamine levels rise and fall. This, combined with progressive loss of the dopamine-producing brain cells, makes it impossible to keep a constant level of dopamine in the body and brain, and these fluctuations are believed to contribute to dyskinesia.
Ask the MD – Dyskinesia