Submitted by Actual-Pumpkin1567 t3_zxsbm7 in askscience
We know that the PD affects the basal ganglia. However, the adrenal gland and paragangliomas are also capable of secreting dopamine. So why don't they fill the dopamine deficiency in the PD?
Another question, does the pheocromocytoma that secrets exclusively the dopamine hormone "supress" totally the symptoms of the Parkinson disease?
kruel1 t1_j22mp9b wrote
Unfortunately, dopamine isn’t able to cross the blood brain barrier. The way PD is treated involves use of levodopa (dopamine precursor) in combination with carbidopa (decarboxylase inhibitor;prevents metabolism of levodopa to help it cross the BBB). The nigrostriatal pathway is the dopamine pathway affected in pd, and through this pathway you get your basal ganglia dopamine responsive pathways that modulate motor activity. But in PD these pathways get disrupted so the dopamine system that applies the brakes beats out the pathway applying the gas. I’m very adhd and I suck at explaining things but would be happy to elaborate further! I do have to say there are some very cool therapies in the works for pd, I’m particularly excited about gene therapy