INVESTIGADORES
PEREZ LLORET Santiago
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Actigraphic evaluation of motor fluctuations in Parkinson’s Disease patients.
Autor/es:
SANTIAGO PEREZ LLORET; MALCO ROSSI; DANIEL P. CARDINALI; DANIEL P. CARDINALI
Lugar:
Chicago
Reunión:
Congreso; Congreso Internacional de Movimientos Anormales; 2008
Resumen:
Background: There is growing interest in developing inexpensive and objective motor fluctuation evaluation methods for Parkinson’s Disease (PD). Objectives: To compare activity level in the off state, on state and dyskinetic periods as evaluated either by a physician during a levodopa challenge or by a 72-hs on-off diary self-evaluation in the ambulatory setting. Finally, the effects of daily activities on motor activity in PD and healthy controls was further explored. Methods: The study was conducted in three consecutive phases. Phase I, in which the On state, Off state and the dyskinesias were evaluated using actigraphy, recordings were made during standard acute levodopa challenge in 9 dyskinetic PD patients. For phase II, a different set of 16 dyskinetic PD patients was monitored in the ambulatory setting for 72 consecutive hours by actigraphy and a standardized ON-OFF diary. For the third phase, 62 PD patients and 14 age- and sex-matched healthy controls wore an actigraph and completed a daily activities diary for 7 days. Results: No differences in activity level between On state and Off state during the acute levodopa challenge (phase I) or the 72-h ambulatory period (phase II) were found. Activity during dyskinesia periods was significantly higher than during ON-state periods without dyskinesia (p<0.01). During the third phase, dyskinetic PD patients and healthy controls showed higher actigraphy-measured activity as compared to de novo, stable or fluctuanting only PD (p<0.0001), which remained unaltered by daily activities performed during the study period. Tremor UPDRS scores did not correlate with activity level. Conclusions: These results confirm the lack of especificity of simple wrist-worn and further suggest it may be suitable for dyskinesia assessment, but not for On state and Off state evaluation.