TY - JOUR
PY - 2016//
TI - Postural instability and gait are associated with severity and prognosis of Parkinson disease
JO - Neurology
A1 - van der Heeden, Jorine F.
A1 - Marinus, Johan
A1 - Martinez-Martin, Pablo
A1 - Rodríguez-Blázquez, Carmen
A1 - Geraedts, Victor J.
A1 - van Hilten, Jacobus J.
SP - 2243
EP - 2250
VL - 86
IS - 24
N2 - OBJECTIVE: Differences in disease progression in Parkinson disease (PD) have variously been attributed to 2 motor subtypes: tremor-dominant (TD) and postural instability and gait difficulty (PIGD)-dominant (PG). We evaluated the role of these phenotypic variants in severity and progression of nondopaminergic manifestations of PD and motor complications.
METHODS: Linear mixed models were applied to data from the Profiling Parkinson's disease (PROPARK) cohort (n = 396) to evaluate the effect of motor subtype on severity and progression of cognitive impairment (Scales for Outcomes in Parkinson's disease [SCOPA]-Cognition [SCOPA-COG]), depression (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale [HADS]), autonomic dysfunction (SCOPA-Autonomic [SCOPA-AUT]), excessive daytime sleepiness, psychotic symptoms (SCOPA-Psychiatric Complications [SCOPA-PC]), and motor complications. In first analyses, subtype as determined by the commonly used ratio of tremor over PIGD score was entered as a factor, whereas in second analyses separate tremor and PIGD scores were used.
RESULTS were verified in an independent cohort (Estudio Longitudinal de Pacientes con Enfermedad de Parkinson [ELEP]; n = 365).
RESULTS: The first analyses showed that PG subtype patients had worse SCOPA-COG, HADS, SCOPA-AUT, SCOPA-PC, and motor complications scores, and exhibited faster progression on the SCOPA-COG. The second analyses showed that only higher PIGD scores were associated with worse scores for these variables; tremor score was not associated with severity or progression of any symptom. Analyses in the independent cohort yielded similar results.
CONCLUSIONS: In contrast to PIGD, which consistently was associated with greater severity of nondopaminergic symptoms, there was no evidence of a benign effect of tremor. Our findings do not support the use of the TD subtype as a prognostic trait in PD. The results showed that severity of PIGD is a useful indicator of severity and prognosis in PD by itself.
© 2016 American Academy of Neurology.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 0028-3878 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000002768 ID - ref1 ER -