Circadian Intervention Improves Parkinson’s Disease and May Slow Disease Progression: A Ten Year Retrospective Study

Background: The involvement of the circadian system in the etiology and treatment of Parkinson’s disease (PD) is becoming an increasingly important topic. The prodromal symptoms of PD include insomnia, fatigue, depression and sleep disturbance which herald the onset of the primary symptoms of bradyk...

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Main Authors: Gregory Willis, Takuyuki Endo, Murray Waldman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2024-11-01
Series:Brain Sciences
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3425/14/12/1218
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author Gregory Willis
Takuyuki Endo
Murray Waldman
author_facet Gregory Willis
Takuyuki Endo
Murray Waldman
author_sort Gregory Willis
collection DOAJ
description Background: The involvement of the circadian system in the etiology and treatment of Parkinson’s disease (PD) is becoming an increasingly important topic. The prodromal symptoms of PD include insomnia, fatigue, depression and sleep disturbance which herald the onset of the primary symptoms of bradykinesia, tremor and rigidity while robbing patients of their quality of life. Light treatment (LT) has been implemented for modifying circadian function in PD but few studies have examined its use in a protracted term that characterizes PD itself. Methods: The present exploratory study monitors the effect of LT over a 10 year course of PD in the context of ongoing circadian function. Results: Improvement in circadian based symptoms were seen soon after LT commenced and continued for the duration of the study. Improvement in motor function was more subtle and was not distinguishable until 1.2 years after commencing treatment. Improvement in most motor and prodromal symptoms remained in steady state for the duration of the study as long as patients were compliant with daily use. Conclusions: The sequence of improvement in prodromal symptoms and motor function seen here parallels the slow, incremental repair process mimicking the protracted degenerative sequelae of PD that extends over decades. This process also emulates the slow incremental improvement characterizing the reparative course seen with circadian symptoms in other disorders that improve with LT. Recent findings from epidemiological work suggest that early disruption of circadian rhythmicity is associated with increased risk of PD and the present findings are consistent with that hypothesis. It is concluded that intervening in circadian function with LT presents a minimally invasive method that is compatible with internal timing that slows the degenerative process of PD.
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spelling doaj-art-91c19be71cec4c308ab13ec3f4cc908f2025-08-20T02:56:06ZengMDPI AGBrain Sciences2076-34252024-11-011412121810.3390/brainsci14121218Circadian Intervention Improves Parkinson’s Disease and May Slow Disease Progression: A Ten Year Retrospective StudyGregory Willis0Takuyuki Endo1Murray Waldman2The Bronowski Clinic, The Bronowski Institute of Behavioral Neuroscience, Woodend, VIC 3442, AustraliaDepartment of Neurology, Osaka Toneyama Medical Center, 5-1-1, Toneyama, Toyonaka 560-8552, Osaka, JapanSunnex Biotechnologies, 657-167 Lombard Ave, Winnipeg, MB R3B 0V3, CanadaBackground: The involvement of the circadian system in the etiology and treatment of Parkinson’s disease (PD) is becoming an increasingly important topic. The prodromal symptoms of PD include insomnia, fatigue, depression and sleep disturbance which herald the onset of the primary symptoms of bradykinesia, tremor and rigidity while robbing patients of their quality of life. Light treatment (LT) has been implemented for modifying circadian function in PD but few studies have examined its use in a protracted term that characterizes PD itself. Methods: The present exploratory study monitors the effect of LT over a 10 year course of PD in the context of ongoing circadian function. Results: Improvement in circadian based symptoms were seen soon after LT commenced and continued for the duration of the study. Improvement in motor function was more subtle and was not distinguishable until 1.2 years after commencing treatment. Improvement in most motor and prodromal symptoms remained in steady state for the duration of the study as long as patients were compliant with daily use. Conclusions: The sequence of improvement in prodromal symptoms and motor function seen here parallels the slow, incremental repair process mimicking the protracted degenerative sequelae of PD that extends over decades. This process also emulates the slow incremental improvement characterizing the reparative course seen with circadian symptoms in other disorders that improve with LT. Recent findings from epidemiological work suggest that early disruption of circadian rhythmicity is associated with increased risk of PD and the present findings are consistent with that hypothesis. It is concluded that intervening in circadian function with LT presents a minimally invasive method that is compatible with internal timing that slows the degenerative process of PD.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3425/14/12/1218circadianParkinson’s diseasesleepfatiguemotor functiondepression
spellingShingle Gregory Willis
Takuyuki Endo
Murray Waldman
Circadian Intervention Improves Parkinson’s Disease and May Slow Disease Progression: A Ten Year Retrospective Study
Brain Sciences
circadian
Parkinson’s disease
sleep
fatigue
motor function
depression
title Circadian Intervention Improves Parkinson’s Disease and May Slow Disease Progression: A Ten Year Retrospective Study
title_full Circadian Intervention Improves Parkinson’s Disease and May Slow Disease Progression: A Ten Year Retrospective Study
title_fullStr Circadian Intervention Improves Parkinson’s Disease and May Slow Disease Progression: A Ten Year Retrospective Study
title_full_unstemmed Circadian Intervention Improves Parkinson’s Disease and May Slow Disease Progression: A Ten Year Retrospective Study
title_short Circadian Intervention Improves Parkinson’s Disease and May Slow Disease Progression: A Ten Year Retrospective Study
title_sort circadian intervention improves parkinson s disease and may slow disease progression a ten year retrospective study
topic circadian
Parkinson’s disease
sleep
fatigue
motor function
depression
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3425/14/12/1218
work_keys_str_mv AT gregorywillis circadianinterventionimprovesparkinsonsdiseaseandmayslowdiseaseprogressionatenyearretrospectivestudy
AT takuyukiendo circadianinterventionimprovesparkinsonsdiseaseandmayslowdiseaseprogressionatenyearretrospectivestudy
AT murraywaldman circadianinterventionimprovesparkinsonsdiseaseandmayslowdiseaseprogressionatenyearretrospectivestudy