Longitudinal associations between physical performance and cognition in individuals with Parkinson’s disease

IF 1.8 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Andrew J. Petkus , Ryan P. Foreman , Matthew Pilgrim , Aram Kim , Elise Hong , Beth E. Fisher , John D. Van Horn , David Wing , Michael W. Jakowec , Dawn M. Schiehser , Giselle M. Petzinger
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Abstract

Background

Declines in physical performance and cognition commonly occur in people with Parkinson’s disease (PwPD) and negatively impacts Quality of Life. Understanding the cross-sectional and longitudinal associations between physical performance and cognition may provide guidance to prevent or treat their decline in PwPD.

Objective

This study investigated the cross-sectional and longitudinal associations between physical performance and cognition in PwPD.

Methods

Physical performance and cognition were evaluated at baseline and at two-year follow-up in PwPD. Physical performance was measured using Ten-Set Test, Time Up and Go, Physical Performance Test, and Short-Physical Performance Battery Test. Neuropsychological assessments included global cognition and domain-specific cognitive functions from which Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) status was ascertained. Regression analyses estimated baseline associations between physical performance and cognition and if changes in physical performance were associated with changes in cognition. Sub-analysis determined which physical performance test was most significantly associated with cognition.

Results

At baseline, better physical performance was associated with lower odds of having MCI as well as better global cognition, attention, and executive function. Baseline physical performance was also associated with changes in executive function and attention (baseline to two-year follow-up). PwPD experiencing greater decline in physical performance experienced more decline in executive function and visuospatial skills.

Conclusion

Physical performance and cognition are closely inter-related in PwPD. Findings are clinically relevant since impaired physical performance may inform those PwPD most likely to demonstrate greatest cognitive deficits over time and who may benefit from treatment strategies, such as neurorehabilitation, for improving cognition and reducing its decline.
帕金森病患者身体表现与认知之间的纵向关联
帕金森病(PwPD)患者通常会出现身体表现和认知能力下降,并对生活质量产生负面影响。了解身体表现和认知之间的横断面和纵向关联可能为预防或治疗PwPD患者的衰退提供指导。目的探讨PwPD患者身体表现与认知的横断面和纵向关系。方法对PwPD患者在基线和2年随访时的身体机能和认知能力进行评估。物理性能通过十组测试,时间上升和走,物理性能测试和短物理性能电池测试来测量。神经心理学评估包括全球认知和领域特异性认知功能,从中确定轻度认知障碍(MCI)状态。回归分析估计了身体表现和认知之间的基线关联,以及身体表现的变化是否与认知的变化相关。子分析确定了哪项体能测试与认知最显著相关。结果在基线上,较好的身体表现与较低的轻度认知障碍几率以及较好的整体认知、注意力和执行功能相关。基线身体表现也与执行功能和注意力的变化有关(基线至两年随访)。身体表现下降更严重的PwPD在执行功能和视觉空间技能方面也有更大的下降。结论PwPD患者的身体表现与认知密切相关。研究结果具有临床相关性,因为受损的身体表现可能会告诉那些PwPD随着时间的推移最有可能表现出最大的认知缺陷,谁可能受益于治疗策略,如神经康复,以改善认知和减少其下降。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Clinical Parkinsonism  Related Disorders
Clinical Parkinsonism Related Disorders Medicine-Neurology (clinical)
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
50
审稿时长
98 days
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