Pill retention in Parkinson’s disease presenting as a soft tissue mass.

Pill retention in Parkinson’s disease presenting as a soft tissue mass.

Publication date: Dec 15, 2025

Dysphagia in Parkinson’s disease (PD) may lead to medication or ‘pill retention’, compromising drug delivery and mimicking other pathology on imaging. We report an octogenarian with advanced PD who presented after an unwitnessed fall, throat pain, hoarseness and cough when swallowing. A CT of the neck suggested a soft tissue mass in the piriform recess. Endoscopic evaluation instead revealed a large collection of retained levodopa tablets above the epiglottis with active aspiration. Management with crushed medication in thickened feeds, allied-health involvement and palliative-focused care was instituted; the patient died several weeks later due to an ischaemic stroke. This case highlights that (1) retained oral PD medications can present as a suspicious neck mass, (2) pill size and formulation must be tailored when dysphagia is present, and (3) early dysphagia screening and multidisciplinary management in PD patients are essential to prevent motor ‘off’ periods, aspiration and misdiagnosis.

Concepts Keywords
Died Aged, 80 and over
Drug Antiparkinson Agents
Parkinson Antiparkinson Agents
Pathology Deglutition Disorders
Weeks Diagnosis, Differential
Endoscopy
Fatal Outcome
Female
Foreign Bodies
Humans
Levodopa
Levodopa
Male
Parkinson Disease
Parkinson’s disease
Tablets
Tablets
Tomography, X-Ray Computed

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH Parkinson’s disease
disease MESH Dysphagia
disease MESH hoarseness
disease MESH cough
drug DRUGBANK Levodopa
disease MESH ischaemic stroke
disease MESH Foreign Bodies
pathway KEGG Parkinson disease

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