Putzke J D, Whaley N R, Baba Y, Wszolek Z K, Uitti R J
Department of Neurology, Mayo Clinic Jacksonville, 4500 San Pablo Road, Jacksonville, FL 32224, USA.
J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2006 Nov;77(11):1235-7. doi: 10.1136/jnnp.2006.086579.
To examine the utility of baseline factors to predict disease progression among a clinical cohort of patients diagnosed with essential tremor.
Tremor Rating Scale (TRS).
A clinical series of 128 consecutive patients diagnosed with essential tremor was included for study. 45 (35%) patients had at least one follow-up exam (mean = 3.6 years). Baseline predictive factors examined included age, age at onset of symptoms, disease duration, sex, handedness, total tremor rating score, asymmetric tremor ratings, location of initial tremor onset, use of drugs for movement disorders, ETOH responsiveness of tremor, association of head or neck tremor, history of depression, familial history of essential tremor, Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease and other movement disorders.
On average, the TRS total score increased by <1 point per year before the first visit to the clinic and by about 2 points per year during the observed study period. The increase of 2 points per year during the observed study period represented an approximate 12% annual change from the mean TRS total score at the first clinic visit. Significant (p<0.05) predictive factors associated with increased tremor severity at the initial clinic visit included older age, longer disease duration, use of movement disorder drugs and the presence of voice tremor (r = 0.24, 0.27, 0.25, 0.19). The major factors associated with an increase in tremor severity from the initial clinic visit to the last follow up included asymmetrical tremor ratings, unilateral initial tremor onset and longer follow-up duration (r = 0.32, 0.31, 0.30). Multivariate regression analysis accounted for about 17-30% of the variance in tremor ratings (p<0.05).
Essential tremor is a slow, progressive disease. The rate of disease progression and the factors associated with disease progression may vary throughout the disease course.
研究基线因素对诊断为特发性震颤的临床队列患者疾病进展的预测作用。
震颤评分量表(TRS)。
纳入连续诊断为特发性震颤的128例患者的临床系列进行研究。45例(35%)患者至少接受了一次随访检查(平均随访3.6年)。所检查的基线预测因素包括年龄、症状起始年龄、病程、性别、利手、震颤总评分、不对称震颤评分、初始震颤发作部位、运动障碍药物使用情况、震颤的乙醇反应性、头或颈部震颤的相关性、抑郁病史、特发性震颤家族史、帕金森病、阿尔茨海默病及其他运动障碍。
平均而言,在首次就诊前,TRS总分每年增加不到1分,在观察研究期间每年增加约2分。观察研究期间每年增加2分相当于首次就诊时TRS总分均值每年约12%的变化。与首次就诊时震颤严重程度增加相关的显著(p<0.05)预测因素包括年龄较大、病程较长、使用运动障碍药物以及存在语音震颤(r = 0.24、0.27、0.25、0.19)。从首次就诊到最后一次随访震颤严重程度增加的主要相关因素包括不对称震颤评分、单侧初始震颤发作和较长的随访时间(r = 0.32、0.31、0.30)。多因素回归分析解释了震颤评分约17% - 30%的方差(p<0.05)。
特发性震颤是一种缓慢进展性疾病。疾病进展速度及与疾病进展相关的因素在疾病过程中可能有所不同。