United
Kingdom Parkinson's Disease Society Brain Bank
Diagnostic Criteria for Parkinson’s Disease
Step 1: Diagnosis of Parkinsonism
Bradykinesia and at least one of the
following:
Step 2: Features tending to exclude
Parkinson’s disease as the cause of Parkinsonism
-
History of repeated strokes with
stepwise progression of parkinsonian features
-
History of repeated head injury
-
History of definite encephalitis
-
Neuroleptic treatment at onset of
symptoms
-
>1 affected relatives
-
Sustained remission
-
Strictly unilateral features after
3 years
-
Supranuclear gaze palsy
-
Cerebellar signs
-
Early severe autonomic involvement
-
Early severe dementia with
disturbances of memory, language and praxis
-
Babinski's sign
-
Presence of a cerebral tumour or
communicating hydrocephalus on computed tomography
scan
-
Negative response to large doses of
levodopa (if malabsorption excluded)
-
1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine
(MPTP) exposure
Step 3: Features that support a
diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease (three or more required
for diagnosis of definite Parkinson’s disease)
-
Unilateral onset
-
Rest tremor present
-
Progressive disorder
-
Persistent asymmetry affecting the
side of onset most
-
Excellent (70–100%) response to
levodopa
-
Severe levodopa-induced chorea
-
Levodopa response for ≥5 years
-
Clinical course of ≥10 years
Criteria of
diagnosis of Parkinson disease (Gelb et al, 1999)
commissioned and supported by the Advisory Council of
the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and
Stroke, US National Institutes of Health.
Grouping of
clinical features of Parkinson’s disease according to
diagnostic utility
GROUP A: Features
characteristic of Parkinson disease
-
Resting tremor
-
Bradykinesia
-
Rigidity
-
Asymmetric onset
GROUP B: Features suggestive
of alternative diagnoses
-
Features unusual early in the
clinical course
-
Prominent postural instability in
the first 3 years after symptom onset
-
Freezing phenomena in the first 3
years
-
Hallucinations unrelated to
medications in the first 3 years
-
Dementia preceding motor symptoms
or in the first year
-
Supranuclear gaze palsy (other than
restriction of upward gaze) or slowing of vertical
saccades
-
Severe, symptomatic dysautonomia
unrelated to medications
-
Documentation of a condition known
to produce Parkinsonism and plausibly connected to the
patient’s symptoms (such as suitably located focal
brain lesions or neuroleptic use within the past 6
months)
Criteria for
POSSIBLE diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease
At least 2 of the 4 features in Group
A are present; at least 1 of these is tremor or
bradykinesia
And either:
-
none of the features in Group B is
present
-
or symptoms have been present for
less than 3 years, and none of the features in Group B
is present to date
And either:
Criteria for
PROBABLE diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease
At lest 3 of the 4 features in Group
A are present
And none of the features in
Group B is present (note: symptom duration of at least 3
years is needed to meet this requirement)
And substantial and sustained
response to levodopa or a dopamine agonist has been
documented
Criteria for
DEFINITE diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease
All criteria for POSSIBLE Parkinson
disease are met
And histopathological confirmation of
the diagnosis is obtained at autopsy
Proposed criteria for
histopathological confirmation of Parkinson disease
-
Substantial nerve cell depletion
with accompanying gliosis in the substantia nigra
-
At least 1 Lewy body in the
substantia nigra or in the locus coeruleus (note: it
may be necessary to examine up to 4 non-overlapping
sections in each of these areas before concluding that
Lewy bodies are absent)
-
No pathological evidence for other
diseases that produce Parkinsonism (eg progressive
supranuclear palsy, multiple system atrophy,
cortical–basal ganglionic degeneration) (Note: in
excluding other diseases that produce Parkinsonism,
published consensus criteria should be used when
available)