AI Article Synopsis

  • Parkinson's disease can cause not just movement problems but also feelings of sadness, lack of motivation, and depression in patients.
  • A study in China with 195 patients showed that more than half of them had these negative feelings at the same time, which made their thinking and movement problems worse.
  • The research found that when patients had more negative feelings, their thinking skills got worse and their movement difficulties increased, and that thinking problems partly explained why their movement issues were getting worse too.

Article Abstract

Objective: Parkinson's disease (PD) is marked not only by motor symptoms but also by neuropsychiatric manifestations, including demoralization, apathy, and depression. Understanding the clinical distribution and characteristics of these co-occurring symptoms is crucial for improving quality of life of PD patients.

Methods: This study enrolled 195 Chinese PD patients from Xinhua Hospital affiliated to Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine. The study involved analyzing the clinical characteristics related to the simultaneous presence of demoralization, apathy, and depression in PD patients. Linear regression was employed to elucidate the linear trend between the quantity of negative neuropsychiatric symptoms and cognitive function, as well as motor symptoms and motor complications. SPSS mediation models were utilized to investigate whether the severity of cognitive function mediated the connection between multiple negative neuropsychiatric symptoms and motor symptoms.

Results: Among PD patients, a notable 57.5% experience the presence of multiple concurrent negative neuropsychiatric symptoms. Our investigation unveiled a correlation where patients with more negative neuropsychiatric symptoms displayed heightened cognitive impairment (P=0.048) and more severe motor symptoms (P=0.024), following a linear trend with increasing symptom numbers. Additionally, cognitive impairment played a partial mediating role in the impact of multiple negative neuropsychiatric symptoms on motor symptoms (β=0.747; 95% bootstrap confidence interval: 0.195 to 1.532).

Conclusions: The co-occurrence of these negative neuropsychiatric symptoms has the potential to worsen cognitive function and motor symptoms in PD patients. Moreover, cognitive impairment was identified as playing a partial mediating role in the relationship between multiple negative neuropsychiatric symptoms and motor symptoms.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10884111PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2024.1345280DOI Listing

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