Taylor J-P, Rowan E N, Lett D, O'Brien J T, McKeith I G, Burn D J
Institute for Ageing and Health, Wolfson Research Centre, Newcastle General Hospital, Westgate Road, Newcastle upon Tyne NE4 6BE, UK.
J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2008 Dec;79(12):1318-23. doi: 10.1136/jnnp.2008.147629. Epub 2008 Jun 27.
Postural instability gait difficulty (PIGD) motor phenotype in Parkinson's disease (PD) is associated with a faster rate of cognitive decline than in tremor dominant cases and may be a risk factor for incident dementia. People with PD display attentional deficits; however, it is not clear whether attentional deficits in patients with non-demented PD are associated with (i) PIGD phenotype and/or (ii) subsequent cognitive decline.
(i) To examine rates of cognitive decline (Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) and Cambridge Cognitive Examination (CAMCOG)) over 3 years in subjects with non-demented PD aged over 65 years, (ii) using Cognitive Drug Research computerised assessment test battery, determine the rate of change in power of attention (PoA) scores over time (sum of mean choice reaction time, simple reaction time and digit vigilance reaction time scores), (iii) determine whether the PIGD phenotype is associated with changes in PoA and (iv) establish whether baseline PoA is associated with subsequent cognitive decline.
14 subjects (38%) were classified as PIGD motor phenotype at baseline. Cognitive decline was greater in PIGD compared with non-PIGD subjects (p < or = 0.02). PIGD phenotype was not associated with baseline PoA score although it was associated with subsequent worsening in PoA (mean PoA increase/year: non-PIGD subjects 11.4 ms; PIGD subjects 244.0 ms; p = 0.01). Higher baseline PoA scores were associated with greater cognitive decline (MMSE, p = 0.03; CAMCOG, p = 0.05) independent of PIGD status.
PIGD phenotype and attention deficits are independently associated with a greater rate of cognitive decline in patients with non-demented PD. We propose that subtle attentional deficits in patients with non-demented PD predict subsequent cognitive impairment.
帕金森病(PD)中的姿势不稳步态障碍(PIGD)运动表型与认知功能下降速度比震颤为主型病例更快相关,且可能是新发痴呆的危险因素。PD患者存在注意力缺陷;然而,尚不清楚非痴呆型PD患者的注意力缺陷是否与(i)PIGD表型和/或(ii)随后的认知功能下降相关。
(i)研究65岁以上非痴呆型PD患者3年内的认知功能下降率(简易精神状态检查表(MMSE)和剑桥认知检查表(CAMCOG)),(ii)使用认知药物研究计算机化评估测试组,确定注意力能力(PoA)分数随时间的变化率(平均选择反应时间、简单反应时间和数字警觉反应时间分数之和),(iii)确定PIGD表型是否与PoA变化相关,以及(iv)确定基线PoA是否与随后的认知功能下降相关。
14名受试者(38%)在基线时被分类为PIGD运动表型。与非PIGD受试者相比,PIGD患者的认知功能下降更明显(p≤0.02)。PIGD表型与基线PoA分数无关,尽管它与随后PoA的恶化相关(PoA平均每年增加:非PIGD受试者11.4毫秒;PIGD受试者244.0毫秒;p = 0.01)。较高的基线PoA分数与更大的认知功能下降相关(MMSE,p = 0.03;CAMCOG,p = 0.05),与PIGD状态无关。
PIGD表型和注意力缺陷与非痴呆型PD患者更快的认知功能下降率独立相关。我们提出,非痴呆型PD患者的轻微注意力缺陷可预测随后的认知损害。