4.6 Article

The Relation Between Cognition and Motor Dysfunction in Drug-Naive Newly Diagnosed Patients with Parkinson's Disease

Journal

MOVEMENT DISORDERS
Volume 26, Issue 12, Pages 2183-2189

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mds.23814

Keywords

Parkinson's disease; cognition; population based; newly diagnosed

Funding

  1. Swedish Medical Research Council
  2. Parkinson Foundation in Sweden
  3. Swedish Association of Persons with Neurological Disabilities
  4. Umea University
  5. Vasterbotten County Council (ALF)
  6. King Gustaf V and Queen Victoria Freemason Foundation
  7. Swedish Brain Foundation
  8. Lions Clubs Sweden's Foundation for Research in Age-Related Diseases
  9. Parkinson Foundation
  10. Kempe Foundation
  11. Vasterbotten County Council

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Recent studies have reported cognitive decline to be common in the early phase of Parkinson's disease. Imaging data connect working memory and executive functioning to the dopamine system. It has also been suggested that bradykinesia is the clinical manifestation most closely related to the nigrostriatal lesion. Exploring the relationship between motor dysfunction and cognition can help us find shared or overlapping systems serving different functions. This relationship has been sparsely investigated in population-based studies of untreated Parkinson's disease. The aim of the present study was to investigate the association between motor signs and cognitive performance in the early stages of Parkinson's disease before the intake of dopaminergic medication. Patients were identified in a population-based study of incident cases with idiopathic parkinsonism. Patients with the postural instability and gait disturbances phenotype were compared with patients with the tremor-dominant phenotype on demographics and cognitive measures. Associations between cognitive and motor scores were investigated, with age, education, and sex controlled for. Bradykinesia was associated with working memory and mental flexibility, whereas axial signs were associated with episodic memory and visuospatial functioning. No significant differences in the neuropsychological variables were found between the postural instability and gait disturbances phenotype and the tremor phenotype. Our results indicate a shared system for slow movement and inflexible thinking that may be controlled by a dopaminergic network different from dopaminergic networks involved in tremor and/or rigidity. The association between axial signs and memory and visuospatial function may point to overlapping systems or pathologies related to these abilities. (C) 2011 Movement Disorder Society

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