Subramanian Indu, McDaniels Bradley, Farahnik Joshua, Mischley Laurie K
David Geffen School of Medicine (IS), UCLA, Department of Neurology, Los Angeles, CA; SW PADRECC (IS), West Los Angeles, Veterans Administration, CA; Department of Rehabilitation and Health Services (BM), University of North Texas, Denton; Bastyr University Research Institute (JF, LKM); and Department of Radiology (LKM), University of Washington.
Neurol Clin Pract. 2023 Apr;13(2):e200124. doi: 10.1212/CPJ.0000000000200124. Epub 2023 Feb 20.
Childhood trauma has been shown to be associated with adverse health outcomes that can last a lifetime. The effects of trauma have not been evaluated in a Parkinson disease (PD) population. The goal of this study was to survey individuals with PD to evaluate whether the intensity of childhood trauma is associated with individual symptoms, overall disease severity, or quality of life.
An Internet-based observational survey was designed to evaluate modifiable variables associated with PD progression. In this cross-sectional analysis, adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) were used as a measure of childhood trauma, patient-reported outcomes in PD for the primary measure of PD severity, and Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) Global for quality of life (QoL).
Seven hundred twelve of 900 participants (79%) responded to the questions related to childhood trauma. Among respondents, QoL decreased as incidence of childhood trauma increased. Individuals with ACE scores 4 or higher reported greater symptom severity for 45% of the variables tested, including apathy, muscle pain, daytime sleepiness, restless leg syndrome, depression, fatigue, comprehension, and anxiety ( < 0.05) compared with individuals with trauma scores of zero.
These data suggest childhood trauma is associated with a mild increase in overall patient-reported PD severity, specifically mood and other nonmotor and motor symptoms. While the associations were statistically significant, the impact of trauma was less robust than previously described predictors of severity, such as diet, exercise, and social connection. Future research should attempt to include more diverse populations, attempt to improve the response rate of these sensitive questions, and, most importantly, determine whether the adverse outcomes associated with childhood trauma can be mitigated with lifestyle modification, psychosocial support, and intervention in adulthood.
儿童期创伤已被证明与可能持续一生的不良健康后果相关。尚未在帕金森病(PD)人群中评估创伤的影响。本研究的目的是对PD患者进行调查,以评估儿童期创伤的强度是否与个体症状、整体疾病严重程度或生活质量相关。
设计了一项基于互联网的观察性调查,以评估与PD进展相关的可改变变量。在这项横断面分析中,童年不良经历(ACEs)被用作儿童期创伤的衡量指标,PD患者报告的结局作为PD严重程度的主要衡量指标,患者报告结局测量信息系统(PROMIS)全球量表用于评估生活质量(QoL)。
900名参与者中有712名(79%)回答了与儿童期创伤相关的问题。在受访者中,生活质量随着儿童期创伤发生率的增加而下降。与创伤评分为零的个体相比,ACE评分4分或更高的个体在45%的测试变量中报告了更严重的症状,包括冷漠、肌肉疼痛、日间嗜睡、不安腿综合征、抑郁、疲劳、理解能力和焦虑(P<0.05)。
这些数据表明,儿童期创伤与患者报告的PD整体严重程度轻度增加相关,特别是情绪以及其他非运动和运动症状。虽然这些关联具有统计学意义,但创伤的影响不如先前描述的严重程度预测因素(如饮食、运动和社会联系)那么显著。未来的研究应尝试纳入更多样化的人群,努力提高这些敏感问题的回答率,最重要的是,确定与儿童期创伤相关的不良后果是否可以通过成年期的生活方式改变、心理社会支持和干预来减轻。