Maycas-Cepeda Teresa, López-Ruiz Pedro, Feliz-Feliz Cici, Gómez-Vicente Lidia, García-Cobos Rocío, Arroyo Rafael, García-Ruiz Pedro J
Department of Neurology, Hospital Universitario Quironsalud Madrid, Madrid, Spain.
Department of Clinical Medicine, Universidad Europea Madrid, Madrid, Spain.
Front Neurol. 2021 Jan 25;11:603582. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2020.603582. eCollection 2020.
Amimia is one of the most typical features of Parkinson's disease (PD). However, its significance and correlation with motor and nonmotor symptoms is unknown. The aim of this study is to evaluate the association between amimia and motor and nonmotor symptoms, including cognitive status, depression, and quality of life in PD patients. We also tested the blink rate as a potential tool for objectively measuring upper facial bradykinesia. We prospectively studied amimia in PD patients. Clinical evaluation was performed using the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) and timed tests. Cognitive status, depression, and quality of life were assessed using the Parkinson's Disease Cognitive Rating Scale (PD-CRS), the 16-Item Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (QIDS-SR16), and the PDQ-39, respectively. Amimia was clinically evaluated according to item 19 of UPDRS III. Finally, we studied upper facial amimia by measuring resting blink frequency and blink rate during spontaneous conversation. We included 75 patients. Amimia (item 19 UPDRS III) correlated with motor and total UPDRS (r: 0.529 and 0.551 Spearman), and its rigidity, distal bradykinesia, and motor axial subscores (r: 0.472; r: 0.252, and r: 0.508, respectively); Hoehn and Yahr scale (r: 0.392), timed tests, gait freezing, cognitive status (r: 0.29), and quality of life (r: 0.268) correlated with amimia. Blinking frequency correlated with amimia (measured with item 19 UPDRS), motor and total UPDRS. Amimia correlates with motor (especially axial symptoms) and cognitive situations in PD. Amimia could be a useful global marker of overall disease severity, including cognitive decline.
表情缺失是帕金森病(PD)最典型的特征之一。然而,其意义以及与运动和非运动症状的相关性尚不清楚。本研究的目的是评估表情缺失与运动和非运动症状之间的关联,包括PD患者的认知状态、抑郁和生活质量。我们还测试了眨眼频率作为客观测量上面部运动迟缓的潜在工具。我们对PD患者的表情缺失进行了前瞻性研究。使用统一帕金森病评定量表(UPDRS)和定时测试进行临床评估。分别使用帕金森病认知评定量表(PD-CRS)、16项抑郁症状快速清单(QIDS-SR16)和PDQ-39评估认知状态、抑郁和生活质量。根据UPDRS III的第19项对表情缺失进行临床评估。最后,我们通过测量静息眨眼频率和自发交谈期间的眨眼率来研究上面部表情缺失。我们纳入了75名患者。表情缺失(UPDRS III第19项)与运动和总UPDRS相关(Spearman相关系数分别为0.529和0.551),及其强直、远端运动迟缓、运动轴性子评分相关(分别为0.472、0.252和0.508);Hoehn和Yahr分级量表(0.392)、定时测试、步态冻结、认知状态(0.29)和生活质量(0.268)与表情缺失相关。眨眼频率与表情缺失(用UPDRS第19项测量)、运动和总UPDRS相关。表情缺失与PD的运动(尤其是轴性症状)和认知情况相关。表情缺失可能是包括认知衰退在内的整体疾病严重程度的有用整体标志物。