There are a very limited number of studies on the clinical features of Parkinson's Disease twenty years after onset. So an assessment was carried out for several years on people who had Parkinson's Disease for more than twenty years
Those people considered were those who had Parkinson's
Disease for 20 to 22 years. They were assessed for an average
of nearly four years. Older age at onset and longer duration of
Parkinson's Disease were each associated with a higher
prevalence of major motor and non-motor milestones of
disease disability. Confinement to a wheelchair or bed had by
then occurred in just over 1 in 5 people (21%). Those factors
making confinement to a wheelchair or bed were older age,
postural instability and institutionalisation. Fractures occurred
in 16% of people. Fractures were associated with postural
instability.
The most frequent outcome was death (28%). However, given the age of diagnosis and the duration of Parkinson's Disease this might have been no more than normal. Mortality was associated with male gender, older age, dysphagia (difficulty in swallowing), orthostatic hypotension, postural instability, fractures and institutionalization.
Reference : Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry [2014] Oct 3 [Epub ahead of
print] (R.Cilia, E.Cereda, C.Klersy, M.Canesi, A.L.Zecchinelli, C.B.Mariani, S.Tesei,
G.Sacilotto, N.Meucci, M.Zini, C.Ruffmann, I.U.Isaias, S.Goldwurm, G.Pezzoli)
http://www.viartis.net/parkinsons.disease/news/141010.pdf
mail@viartis.net
©2014 Viartis
No comments:
Post a Comment