Stock Lena, Krüger-Zechlin Charlotte, Deeb Zain, Timmermann Lars, Waldthaler Josefine
Department of Neurology, University Hospital Marburg, Marburg, Germany.
Center for Mind, Brain and Behavior - CMBB, Universities Marburg and Gießen, Marburg, Germany.
Front Aging Neurosci. 2020 May 22;12:120. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2020.00120. eCollection 2020.
Patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) show eye movement abnormalities and frequently complain about difficulties in reading. So far, it is unclear whether basal ganglia dysfunction or cognitive impairment has a greater impact on eye movements during reading. To analyze eye movement behavior during a natural reading task with respect to cognitive state and dopaminergic therapy in PD and healthy controls. Eye movements of 59 PD patients and 29 age- and education-matched healthy controls were recorded during mute, self-paced reading of a text. 25 cognitively normal PD patients performed the task additionally in off medication state. Clinical assessment included a comprehensive neuropsychological test battery and the motor section of MDS-Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS). PD-mild cognitive impairment (MCI) was diagnosed in 21 patients. Reading speed was significantly reduced in PD-MCI compared to healthy controls and PD patients without MCI due to higher numbers of progressive saccades. Cognitively intact PD patients showed no significant alterations of reading speed or eye movement pattern during reading. The fixation duration tended to be prolonged in PD compared to healthy controls and decreased significantly after levodopa intake. Scores for executive functions, attention, and language correlated with reading speed in the PD group. The present study is the first to reveal (1) reduced reading speed with altered reading pattern in PD with MCI and (2) a relevant impact of levodopa on fixation duration during reading in PD. Further research is needed to determine whether therapeutic interventions, e.g., levodopa or neuropsychological training, improve the subjective reading experience for patients with PD.
帕金森病(PD)患者存在眼球运动异常,且经常抱怨阅读困难。到目前为止,尚不清楚基底神经节功能障碍或认知障碍在阅读过程中对眼球运动的影响更大。为了分析PD患者和健康对照在自然阅读任务中,认知状态和多巴胺能治疗对眼球运动行为的影响。在默读一段文本的过程中,记录了59名PD患者和29名年龄及教育程度匹配的健康对照的眼球运动。25名认知正常的PD患者在未服药状态下额外完成了该任务。临床评估包括一套全面的神经心理测试组合以及MDS统一帕金森病评定量表(MDS-UPDRS)的运动部分。21名患者被诊断为PD-轻度认知障碍(MCI)。与健康对照和无MCI的PD患者相比,PD-MCI患者的阅读速度显著降低,这是由于渐进性扫视次数更多。认知完整的PD患者在阅读过程中阅读速度或眼球运动模式无显著改变。与健康对照相比,PD患者的注视持续时间往往延长,左旋多巴摄入后显著缩短。PD组的执行功能、注意力和语言得分与阅读速度相关。本研究首次揭示:(1)PD合并MCI患者的阅读速度降低且阅读模式改变;(2)左旋多巴对PD患者阅读时的注视持续时间有显著影响。需要进一步研究以确定治疗干预措施,如左旋多巴或神经心理训练,是否能改善PD患者的主观阅读体验。