Parkinson’s Disease (PD) Diagnosis Score Calculator (Brain Bank Criteria)

UK Brain Bank Criteria – Parkinson’s Disease Aid

UK Brain Bank Criteria – Parkinson’s Disease Diagnostic Aid

Simplified decision helper using the UK Parkinson’s Disease Society Brain Bank clinical criteria.

For health professionals only. This tool is an educational aid summarizing the UK Brain Bank criteria. It does not replace expert neurological assessment, full history/examination, imaging or consideration of alternative diagnoses, and must not be used by patients for self-diagnosis or treatment decisions.
Step 1 – Parkinsonian syndrome
Slowness of initiation of movement with progressive reduction in speed and amplitude on repetitive actions.
Step 2 – Exclusion criteria for idiopathic PD

Tick any features that are present. If any are present, the UK Brain Bank criteria do not support idiopathic Parkinson’s disease.

Step 3 – Supportive positive criteria

Tick all that apply. Three or more supportive criteria, with Step 1 satisfied and no Step 2 exclusions, support a diagnosis of idiopathic PD.

Result

Complete the sections above and press “Apply UK Brain Bank Criteria” to see whether the pattern is compatible with idiopathic Parkinson’s disease under these criteria.

The UK Parkinson’s Disease Society Brain Bank criteria (often called the Queen Square Brain Bank criteria) are classic clinical criteria used to diagnose idiopathic Parkinson’s disease (PD). They were developed to improve diagnostic accuracy in life, and they remain widely referenced even though newer criteria (such as the MDS-PD criteria) are now also in use.

These criteria organize diagnosis into three steps:

  1. Step 1 – Diagnosis of a parkinsonian syndrome
  2. Step 2 – Exclusion criteria for idiopathic PD
  3. Step 3 – Supportive positive criteria for idiopathic PD

Step 1 – Diagnosis of a parkinsonian syndrome

To be considered as having a parkinsonian syndrome, the patient must have:

  • Bradykinesia (slowness of initiation and progressive reduction in speed/amplitude of repetitive movements)
    PLUS at least one of:
  • Muscular rigidity
  • 4–6 Hz resting tremor
  • Postural instability not primarily due to visual, vestibular, cerebellar, or proprioceptive dysfunction

If Step 1 is not fulfilled, the Brain Bank criteria cannot be applied to diagnose idiopathic PD.


Step 2 – Exclusion criteria for Parkinson’s disease

A range of historical and clinical features rule out idiopathic PD under these criteria, for example:

  • History of repeated strokes with stepwise progression
  • Repeated head injury
  • Definite encephalitis
  • Oculogyric crises
  • Neuroleptic treatment at onset of symptoms
  • More than one affected relative
  • Sustained remission
  • Strictly unilateral signs after 3 years
  • Supranuclear gaze palsy
  • Cerebellar signs
  • Early, severe autonomic failure
  • Early, severe dementia (memory, language, praxis)
  • Babinski sign
  • Structural lesions (tumour, normal-pressure hydrocephalus) on imaging
  • Clearly negative response to high-dose levodopa (without malabsorption)
  • MPTP exposure

If any exclusion criterion is present, the diagnosis of idiopathic PD is not supported by the Brain Bank criteria.


Step 3 – Supportive positive criteria

To diagnose “definite” idiopathic PD using these criteria, the patient must:

  • Fulfil Step 1,
  • Have no Step 2 exclusions,
  • Have three or more of the following supportive features:
  1. Unilateral onset
  2. Rest tremor present
  3. Progressive disorder
  4. Persistent asymmetry (side of onset more affected)
  5. Excellent response (≈70–100%) to levodopa
  6. Severe levodopa-induced chorea
  7. Levodopa response for ≥5 years

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