Depressive symptoms can amplify embarrassment in essential tremor.

Journal of Clinical Movement Disorders Pub Date : 2016-07-15 eCollection Date: 2016-01-01 DOI:10.1186/s40734-016-0039-6
Elan D Louis, Stephanie Cosentino, Edward D Huey
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引用次数: 25

Abstract

Background: Embarrassment can be a considerable problem for patients with essential tremor (ET) and is a major motivator for treatment. Depression is also a common feature of ET; as many as 35 % of patients report moderate to severe depressive symptoms. Our goal was to assess the associations between these motor and psychosocial factors (tremor, depression, embarrassment) in ET, with a particular interest in more fully assessing the possible association between depression and embarrassment.

Methods: Ninety one ET cases (age 70.4 ± 12.8 years) enrolled in a prospective, clinical-epidemiological study. Depressive symptoms were assessed with the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CESD-10, 0-30 [maximum]), embarrassment, with the Essential Tremor Embarrassment Assessment (ETEA, 0-70 [maximum]), and action tremor, with a detailed in-person neurological examination.

Results: Higher CESD-10 score was significantly associated with higher ETEA score (p = 0.005), but not with increasing tremor severity (p = 0.94). In stratified analyses, cases with no or minimal depressive symptoms had the lowest ETEA scores, cases with moderate depressive symptoms had intermediate ETEA scores, and cases with severe depressive symptoms had the highest ETEA scores (p = 0.01). Furthermore, at each level of tremor severity, cases with more depressive symptoms had more embarrassment.

Conclusions: Depressive symptoms seem to be more than a secondary response to the tremor in ET; they seem to amplify the level of embarrassment and, in addition to their own importance, seem to be a driver of other important clinical outcomes. Earlier treatment of depressive symptoms in ET patients could lessen the burden of secondary embarrassment.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

原发性震颤患者的抑郁症状会加重尴尬感。
背景:对于特发性震颤(ET)患者来说,尴尬是一个相当大的问题,也是治疗的主要动力。抑郁也是ET的一个共同特征;多达35%的患者报告有中度至重度抑郁症状。我们的目标是评估ET中这些运动和社会心理因素(震颤、抑郁、尴尬)之间的联系,特别感兴趣的是更全面地评估抑郁和尴尬之间可能的联系。方法:91例ET患者(年龄70.4±12.8岁)纳入前瞻性临床流行病学研究。采用流行病学研究中心抑郁量表(csd -10, 0-30[最大值])、困窘(伴有特发性震颤困窘评估(ETEA, 0-70[最大值])和行动性震颤进行抑郁症状评估,并进行详细的面对面神经学检查。结果:较高的csd -10评分与较高的ETEA评分显著相关(p = 0.005),但与震颤严重程度增加无关(p = 0.94)。在分层分析中,无抑郁症状或轻度抑郁症状患者ETEA评分最低,中度抑郁症状患者ETEA评分中等,重度抑郁症状患者ETEA评分最高(p = 0.01)。此外,在每个级别的震颤严重程度上,抑郁症状更严重的病例有更多的尴尬。结论:抑郁症状似乎不仅仅是ET震颤的次要反应;它们似乎放大了尴尬的程度,除了它们本身的重要性之外,它们似乎也是其他重要临床结果的驱动因素。早期治疗ET患者的抑郁症状可以减轻继发性尴尬的负担。
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