de Frias Cindy M, Dixon Roger A, Fisher Nancy, Camicioli Richard
Division of Neurology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
Neuropsychologia. 2007 Jun 18;45(11):2499-507. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2007.03.022. Epub 2007 Mar 31.
We examined whether intraindividual variability of neurocognitive speed, or inconsistency, is greater in stages of Parkinson's disease (PD) as compared to a matched group of normal older adults. Intraindividual variability was assessed using four reaction time (RT) (simple and complex) tasks. We examined three sets of correlates: executive functioning (Stroop (interference index), Trail Making Test (Part B), and Digit Ordering Test), finger tapping speed, and gait speed. The participants were matched on age, sex, and education, and did not differ in global cognitive functioning. There were 50 patients with a clinical diagnosis of idiopathic PD (29 men and 21 women) who ranged from 65 to 84 years (M=71.5, S.D.=4.7) and 48 matched healthy older adults who ranged from 65 to 84 years (M=71.5, S.D.=4.9). Multiple analyses of variance showed that the PD patients were slower on all three complex RT tasks, and more inconsistent than healthy older adults on the most complex (eight-choice) RT task. Individuals with advanced disease had slower neurocognitive speed and more inconsistency than patients with earlier stage PD. Poorer executive functioning was associated with slower neurocognitive performance in healthy older adults, mild PD patients, and especially severe PD patients. Greater inconsistency in speed was related to poorer executive functioning in late stage PD (for the most complex task) and in healthy older adults (for the simplest task), indicating that motor and cognitive domains have functional coupling (i.e., as one becomes compromised so does the other). Intraindividual variability was not correlated with tapping speed and gait speed in any group. Executive functioning and neurocognitive speed may be valid and distinct clinical markers of disease progression in PD.
我们研究了与匹配的正常老年人组相比,帕金森病(PD)患者神经认知速度的个体内变异性(即不一致性)在疾病各阶段是否更大。使用四项反应时间(RT)(简单和复杂)任务评估个体内变异性。我们研究了三组相关因素:执行功能(斯特鲁普(干扰指数)、连线测验(B部分)和数字排序测验)、手指敲击速度和步态速度。参与者在年龄、性别和教育程度上相匹配,且在整体认知功能上无差异。有50例临床诊断为特发性PD的患者(29名男性和21名女性),年龄在65至84岁之间(M = 71.5,标准差 = 4.7),以及48名匹配的健康老年人,年龄在65至84岁之间(M = 71.5,标准差 = 4.9)。多因素方差分析表明,PD患者在所有三项复杂RT任务上的反应都较慢,并且在最复杂的(八选一)RT任务上比健康老年人更不一致。疾病晚期的个体比早期PD患者的神经认知速度更慢且更不一致。在健康老年人、轻度PD患者尤其是重度PD患者中,较差的执行功能与较慢的神经认知表现相关。在晚期PD(对于最复杂的任务)和健康老年人(对于最简单的任务)中,速度上更大的不一致与较差的执行功能相关,这表明运动和认知领域存在功能耦合(即一方受损时另一方也会受损)。在任何组中,个体内变异性与敲击速度和步态速度均无相关性。执行功能和神经认知速度可能是PD疾病进展的有效且独特的临床标志物。