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首页> 外文期刊>Chronobiology international >Variations in rest-activity rhythm are associated with clinically measured disease severity in Parkinson's disease
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Variations in rest-activity rhythm are associated with clinically measured disease severity in Parkinson's disease

机译:Variations in rest-activity rhythm are associated with clinically measured disease severity in Parkinson's disease

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The continuous, longitudinal nature of accelerometry monitoring is well-suited to capturing the regular 24-hour oscillations in human activity across the day, the cumulative effect of our circadian rhythm and behavior. Disruption of the circadian rhythm in turn disrupts rest-activity rhythms. Although circadian disruption is a major feature of Parkinson's disease (PD), rest-activity rhythms and their relationship with disease severity have not been well characterized in PD. 13 PD participants (Hoehn & Yahr Stage [H&Y] 1-3) wore a Philips Actiwatch Spectrum PRO continuously for two separate weeks. Rest-activity rhythms were quantified by fitting an oscillating 24-hour cosinor model to each participant-day of activity data. One-way ANOVAs adjusted for demographics revealed significant variation in the amount (MESOR, F = 12.76, p < .01), range (Amplitude, F = 9.62, p < .01), and timing (Acrophase, F = 2.7, p = .05) of activity across H&Y Stages. Those with higher H&Y Stages were significantly more likely to be active later in the day, where-as those who shifted between H&Y Stages during the study were significantly more active than those who did not change H&Y Stage. Being active later in the day was also significantly associated with higher scores on the Movement Disorder Society's Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS) Section III (motor symptom severity, p = .02), Section II (self-reported impact of motor symptoms on daily living, p = .01), and Total Score (p = .01) in an adjusted linear regression model; significant associations between MDS-UPDRS scores and activity levels were observed only in the unadjusted model. These findings demonstrate that continuous actigraphy is capable of detecting rest-activity disruption in PD, and provides preliminary evidence that rest-activity rhythms are associated with motor symptom severity and H&Y Stage.

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