Rochester Lynn, Hetherington Victoria, Jones Diana, Nieuwboer Alice, Willems Anne-Marie, Kwakkel Gert, Van Wegen Erwin
Northumbria University, Newcastle, UK.
Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2004 Oct;85(10):1578-85. doi: 10.1016/j.apmr.2004.01.025.
To evaluate the interference effects on walking of functional activities in the home in people with Parkinson's disease (PD) and the contribution of clinical symptoms to disturbance of gait.
A repeated-measures trial, using a dual-task paradigm to evaluate the attentional demands of functional activities.
Participants' homes and a clinic.
Twenty subjects with idiopathic PD and 10 age-, sex-, and education-matched controls.
Subjects performed a simple walking task, a dual-motor task, a dual-cognitive task, and a multiple task, all of which were real-world activities. Main outcome measures Walking speed, mean step length, and step frequency were compared across different tasks for each subject. A battery of clinical outcome measures hypothesized to compete for attention were also conducted: cognition (Hayling and Brixton tests), anxiety and depression (Hospital Anxiety and Depression test), fatigue (Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory), balance (Berg Balance Scale), and disease severity (Hoehn and Yahr score).
PD subjects walked at a significantly slower speed (26.5%, P<.001) and reduced step length (23%, P<.001) than did the controls. Performance of a concurrent cognitive and multitask resulted in significantly slower gait speed (P=.022; P<.015) and reduced mean step length (P=.022; P=.001) in PD subjects. Cognitive function, depression, physical fatigue, and balance were significantly related to walking speed for the functional tasks. Multiple regression analysis showed that the Brixton test, physical fatigue, and depression accounted for up to 39% of the variation in walking speed during functional tasks in PD and control subjects and balance accounted for 54% of variance for walking in PD subjects.
Competition for attention through additional activities, decreased executive function, depression, fatigue, and impaired balance will increase difficulty in walking for PD subjects. Evaluation of performance during complex functional activities in an appropriate environment should be a focus of therapeutic assessment. Furthermore, functional performance may be influenced by several other symptoms that should also be considered.
评估帕金森病(PD)患者家中功能活动对步行的干扰作用以及临床症状对步态障碍的影响。
一项重复测量试验,采用双任务范式评估功能活动的注意力需求。
参与者家中及诊所。
20名特发性PD患者和10名年龄、性别及教育程度匹配的对照者。
受试者执行简单步行任务、双运动任务、双认知任务和多任务,所有这些均为现实生活中的活动。主要结局指标 比较每个受试者在不同任务中的步行速度、平均步长和步频。还进行了一系列假设会争夺注意力的临床结局指标评估:认知(海林和布里克斯顿测试)、焦虑和抑郁(医院焦虑抑郁测试)、疲劳(多维疲劳量表)、平衡(伯格平衡量表)以及疾病严重程度(霍恩和亚尔评分)。
与对照组相比,PD患者步行速度显著减慢(26.5%,P<0.001)且步长缩短(23%,P<0.001)。同时进行认知任务和多任务时,PD患者的步态速度显著减慢(P = 0.022;P<0.015)且平均步长缩短(P = 0.022;P = 0.001)。认知功能、抑郁、身体疲劳和平衡与功能任务中的步行速度显著相关。多元回归分析表明,布里克斯顿测试、身体疲劳和抑郁占PD患者和对照者功能任务中步行速度变化的比例高达39%,平衡占PD患者步行方差的54%。
通过额外活动争夺注意力、执行功能下降、抑郁、疲劳和平衡受损会增加PD患者的步行困难。在适当环境中评估复杂功能活动期间的表现应成为治疗评估的重点。此外,功能表现可能受其他几种症状影响,也应予以考虑。