Abstract

The severity of Parkinson’s disease (PD) is developed by multifactorial factors. Falls can worsen disease severity. We previously found that frontal assessment battery (FAB) score was associated with a higher risk of future falls. This eight-year follow-up study aimed to verify whether factors including low FAB score can be the risk of PD progression based on the Hoehn and Yahr scale. In total, 95 patients were initially enrolled in this research and 45 were included in the final follow-up. Then, the cohort was classified into patients with and without disease progression, defined by upgrade of Hoehn-Yahr stage. Differences in clinical characteristics between patients with disease progression and those without were evaluated using the Mann–Whitney U test. Eighteen independent variables were evaluated via a univariate logistic regression analysis. Of the 45 patients enrolled, 32 had disease progression and 13 had no progression. Age (p = 0.033), BFI score (p = 0.003), Zung self-rating depression (p = 0.011), and anxiety scale (p = 0.026) were significantly increased in patients who had disease progression than those with no disease progression. On multivariate logistic regression analysis, brief fatigue inventory (BFI) score (OR = 1.048, p = 0.045, 95% CI = 1.001–1.098) was significantly related to disease progression. All BFI subscores related to general fatigue. Fatigue could predict the progression of motor dysfunction severity over a longitudinal duration in patients with PD with disease progression, having declining physical and mental fatigue.

Highlights

  • Disease severity of Parkinson’s disease (PD) is developed by multifactorial factors

  • The results of multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that fatigue significantly increased the risk of disease progression (OR = 1.048, p = 0.045, 95% confidence intervals (CI) = 1.001–1.098)

  • The present study showed that patients with disease progression measured by HoehnYahr stage have higher fatigue scores than those without progression

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Summary

Introduction

Disease severity of Parkinson’s disease (PD) is developed by multifactorial factors. Falls can worsen disease severity. During the two-year course, this cohort had a lower frontal assessment battery (FAB) score, which was closely correlated with slow gait with freezing, and it could be a predictor of a higher risk of falling in 30 patients with Hoehn and Yahr stage III PD [2]. Results showed that the low FAB score and a history of falls within the last six months were associated with a higher risk of future falls [3]. This finding can give rise to an open question of whether factors including low FAB score can be predictors of PD severity during a longitudinal follow-up period. We assessed 100 patients during an eight-year follow-up to determine the predictors of PD progression

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