Self-Perception of Drooling Impact in People with Parkinson's Disease: A Case-Control and Cross-Sectional Study.

IF 2.6 4区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
David Nascimento, Bruna Meira, Luís Garcez, Daisy Abreu, Tiago F Outeiro, Isabel Guimarães, Joaquim J Ferreira
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Abstract

Background: Drooling, defined as the involuntary loss of saliva from the anterior oral cavity, is potentially problematic for people with Parkinson's disease (PwP). However, there is little research on how PwP perceive the impact of drooling and what factors contribute to it.

Objectives: The objective was to evaluate the self-perceived impact of drooling in people with and without Parkinson's disease and the contributing clinical factors in PwP.

Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional and case-control study. Participants were clinically examined, and the primary outcome was the Sialorrhea Clinical Scale for Parkinson's disease. Clinical variables were compared between PwP and control subjects using the Mann-Whitney test, correlations between drooling impact and clinical factors in PwP were analyzed using Spearman's test, and predictors were identified using linear regression.

Results: The study included 101 PwP and 101 sex- and age-matched controls. PwP experienced significantly more severe impact of drooling compared to controls across all domains: diurnal and nocturnal drooling, drooling severity and frequency, social discomfort, speech, and eating impairments. The greater impact of drooling in PwP was significantly associated with drooling severity, disease duration, levodopa equivalent daily dose, clinical global impression of saliva accumulation (CGI-S), chewing, swallowing, speech, oromotor, motor and non-motor impairments. Significant predictors of greater impact of drooling in PwP include drooling severity, higher CGI-S, facial expression, and swallowing impairments.

Conclusions: PwP have a significantly greater impact of drooling compared to controls, affecting several domains. Drooling impact and its contributing clinical factors should be investigated in a Parkinson's consultation.

帕金森病患者流口水影响的自我知觉:一项病例对照和横断面研究
背景:流口水,定义为前口腔不自主的唾液流失,是帕金森病(PwP)患者的潜在问题。然而,关于PwP如何感知流口水的影响以及导致流口水的因素的研究很少。目的:目的是评估帕金森病患者和非帕金森病患者流口水的自我感知影响以及PwP的相关临床因素。方法:采用横断面和病例对照研究。参与者被临床检查,主要结果是帕金森氏病唾液临床量表。采用Mann-Whitney检验比较PwP与对照组的临床变量,采用Spearman检验分析PwP患者流口水影响与临床因素的相关性,并采用线性回归确定预测因子。结果:该研究包括101名PwP和101名性别和年龄匹配的对照组。与对照组相比,PwP在所有领域都经历了更严重的流口水影响:白天和夜间流口水,流口水的严重程度和频率,社交不适,语言和饮食障碍。在PwP中,流口水的更大影响与流口水严重程度、疾病持续时间、左旋多巴当量日剂量、临床唾液积累总体印象(CGI-S)、咀嚼、吞咽、言语、运动、运动和非运动损伤显著相关。流口水对PwP影响较大的重要预测因素包括流口水严重程度、较高的CGI-S、面部表情和吞咽障碍。结论:与对照组相比,PwP对流口水的影响明显更大,影响到几个领域。在帕金森氏症会诊时,应调查流口水的影响及其促成的临床因素。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
7.50%
发文量
218
期刊介绍: Movement Disorders Clinical Practice- is an online-only journal committed to publishing high quality peer reviewed articles related to clinical aspects of movement disorders which broadly include phenomenology (interesting case/case series/rarities), investigative (for e.g- genetics, imaging), translational (phenotype-genotype or other) and treatment aspects (clinical guidelines, diagnostic and treatment algorithms)
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