Goldman Jennifer G, Stebbins Glenn T, Leung Vania, Tilley Barbara C, Goetz Christopher G
Rush University Medical Center, Department of Neurological Sciences, Section of Parkinson Disease and Movement Disorders, Chicago, IL, USA.
Rush University Medical Center, Department of Neurological Sciences, Section of Parkinson Disease and Movement Disorders, Chicago, IL, USA.
Parkinsonism Relat Disord. 2014 Nov;20(11):1135-9. doi: 10.1016/j.parkreldis.2014.08.001. Epub 2014 Aug 13.
Non-motor complications of Parkinson's disease (PD), specifically cognitive impairment, sleep disturbances, and fatigue, are recognized as important contributors to poor patient outcomes and quality of life. How sleep problems and fatigue interrelate and impact cognitive function, however, has not systematically been investigated across the stages of PD. The aim of our study was to investigate the relationships among cognitive impairment, night-time sleep problems, daytime sleepiness, and fatigue across all severities of PD.
We examined these non-motor problems using the Movement Disorder Society-Sponsored Revision of the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS) in a study of 1319 PD patients drawn from three large cohort studies: the Parkinson's Progressive Markers Initiative, the Rush University PD Cognitive-Behavioral-Imaging study, and the Movement Disorder Society-Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale Clinimetric testing program study, which spanned the gamut of disease, from early to advanced PD. Generalized linear mixed models with logit linking functions and covariates including study cohort, age, PD duration, and presence/absence of PD medications were used to examine relationships between these three non-motor symptoms and cognitive impairment.
Of these three frequent, and often inter-twined, non-motor complications, greater daytime sleepiness and fatigue were associated with worse cognitive impairment across the full spectrum of PD (F[16,1158] = 2.40 and F[16,1158] = 3.45 respectively, p's < 0.0005), but an association with night-time sleep was not detected (p = 0.83).
Given this association of daytime sleepiness and fatigue with cognitive impairment, clinical monitoring for these problems should be considered across all points in the PD spectrum, from early to more advanced disease.
帕金森病(PD)的非运动并发症,特别是认知障碍、睡眠障碍和疲劳,被认为是导致患者预后不良和生活质量下降的重要因素。然而,睡眠问题和疲劳如何相互关联并影响认知功能,尚未在PD的各个阶段进行系统研究。我们研究的目的是调查PD所有严重程度下认知障碍、夜间睡眠问题、日间嗜睡和疲劳之间的关系。
我们在一项对1319名PD患者的研究中,使用运动障碍协会赞助的统一帕金森病评定量表修订版(MDS-UPDRS)来检查这些非运动问题。这些患者来自三项大型队列研究:帕金森病进展标志物倡议研究、拉什大学PD认知-行为-影像学研究以及运动障碍协会-统一帕金森病评定量表临床测量测试项目研究,涵盖了从早期到晚期PD的整个疾病范围。使用具有logit链接函数和协变量(包括研究队列、年龄、PD病程以及是否使用PD药物)的广义线性混合模型来检查这三种非运动症状与认知障碍之间的关系。
在这三种常见且常常相互交织的非运动并发症中,在整个PD范围内,日间嗜睡和疲劳程度越高,认知障碍越严重(分别为F[16,1158] = 2.40和F[16,1158] = 3.45,p值均<0.0005),但未检测到与夜间睡眠的关联(p = 0.83)。
鉴于日间嗜睡和疲劳与认知障碍之间的这种关联,从疾病早期到更晚期,在PD病程的各个阶段都应考虑对这些问题进行临床监测。