Nathan Hantke, Barbara H Brumbach, Lauren Siegel, Martina Mancini, Delaram Safarpour
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Essential Tremor (ET) is increasingly recognized as phenotypically heterogeneous disorder, which may encompass alterations in gait, balance and cognitive dysfunction. Disruption in cerebellar-thalamic-cortical circuits results in varying patterns of executive and memory dysfunction and balance disorders. The current study proposed two aims: 1) identify cognitive subtypes within individuals with essential tremor, and 2) examine for a correlation between these subtypes and gait and balance dysfunction. We hypothesize that gait and balance dysfunction are more common in individuals with ET who demonstrate greater cognitive difficulties.
Methods: Seventy-one individuals underwent neuropsychological and physical therapy examinations as part of presurgical deep brain stimulation (DBS) evaluations that included measures of gait and balance (Mini-BESTest; Timed Up and Go, SARA). People with ET were categorized into Cognitively Normal (N = 29), Low Executive Function/Processing Speed (N = 17), and Low Memory Multi-domain groups (N = 25).
Results: Regression analyses show that scores on the Mini-Balance Evaluation Systems Test and Scale for the Assessment and Rating of Ataxia were worse in the Low Memory and Low Executive Function groups compared to the cognitively normal group; age was also a significant predictor. Scores on the Timed Up and Go were worse for the Low Executive Function compared to the cognitive normal group; age and education were also significant predictors. Medication use was not associated with any of the clinical gait and balance tests. However, medication use and age were significant predictors of reported falls in daily life.
Conclusions: A subset of individuals with ET experience cognitive dysfunction that coalesce into processing speed deficits or immediate memory deficits. These cognitive subtypes were associated with greater difficulty in balance and gait as compared to cognitively normal ET patient and this difference could not be accounted for by medications.