Ergot vs non-ergot Parkinson drugs

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Phloston

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UWorld says that there are two classes of Parkinson drugs: ergot and non-ergot.

Ergot: bromocriptine, pergolide

Non-ergot: pramipexole, ropinerole

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FA (p. 478) says that the non-ergot are preferred to ergot.

What does that mean and why? When are either of these drug classes circumstantially used?

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Non-ergots don't cause vasoconstriction and are used when the patient has increased risk of MI or peripheral vascular disease.
 
Ergots like bromocriptine also carry the lovely side effects of hallucination and confusion as a result of their fungal origin. aka it's a Parkinson drug combined with magic mushrooms.
 
because Painless digital vasospasm is a dose-related complication of long-term treatment with the ergot derivatives (bromocriptine or pergolide). When cardiac arrhythmias occur. Cardiac valvulopathy may occur with pergolide.
 
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