Abstract

ObjectiveTo identify associated (non-)motor profiles of Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients with hyperhidrosis as a dominant problem.MethodsThis is a cross-sectional, exploratory, analysis of participants enrolled in the Non-motor Longitudinal International Study (NILS; UKCRN No: 10084) at the Parkinson’s Centre at King’s College Hospital (London, UK). Hyperhidrosis scores (yes/no) on question 28 of the Non-Motor Symptom Questionnaire were used to classify patients with normal sweat function (n = 172) and excessive sweating (n = 56) (Analysis 1; n = 228). NMS scale (NMSS) question 30 scores were used to stratify participants based on hyperhidrosis severity (Analysis 2; n = 352) using an arbitrary severity grading: absent score 0 (n = 267), mild 1–4 (n = 49), moderate 5–8 (n = 17), and severe 9–12 (n = 19). NMS burden, as well as PD sleep scale (PDSS) scores were then analysed along with other correlates.ResultsNo differences were observed in baseline demographics between groups in either analysis. Patients with hyperhidrosis exhibited significantly higher total NMSS burden compared to those without (p < 0.001). Secondary analyses revealed higher dyskinesia scores, worse quality of life and PDSS scores, and higher anxiety and depression levels in hyperhidrosis patients (p < 0.001). Tertiary analyses revealed higher NMSS item scores for fatigue, sleep initiation, restless legs, urinary urgency, and unexplained pain (p < 0.001).ConclusionsChronic hyperhidrosis appears to be associated with a dysautonomia dominant subtype in PD patients, which is also associated with sleep disorders and a higher rate of dyskinesia (fluctuation-related hyperhidrosis). These data should prompt the concept of hyperhidrosis being used as a simple clinical screening tool to identify PD patients with autonomic symptoms.

Highlights

  • Hyperhidrosis is one of the least studied non-motor symptoms (NMS) in Parkinson’s disease (PD)

  • The pattern of dyshidrosis in PD appears to differ from the general population and axial hyperhidrosis in PD is associated with decreased activation of sweat glands in the palms of the hands suggesting that axial hyperhidrosis could be a compensatory phenomenon for reduced sympathetic function in the extremities [5]

  • No differences were observed in age, gender, disease duration, and Levodopa Equivalent Dose (LED) between patients with and without hyperhidrosis

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Summary

Introduction

Hyperhidrosis is one of the least studied non-motor symptoms (NMS) in Parkinson’s disease (PD). Sweating disorders in PD include mainly hyperhidrosis, and hypohydrosis, and the prevalence is reported by some at 64% of PD patients, compared to 12.5% of healthy controls [1]. Hyperhidrosis in PD could be chronic or paroxysmal, on the one hand, and non-fluctuating or related to non-motor fluctuations, on the other [2]. The phenomenon of hyperhidrosis may overlap with an increase of sebum excretion rate known as seborrhoea which is frequent in PD patients [3]. The pattern of dyshidrosis in PD appears to differ from the general population and axial hyperhidrosis in PD is associated with decreased activation of sweat glands in the palms of the hands suggesting that axial hyperhidrosis could be a compensatory phenomenon for reduced sympathetic function in the extremities [5]

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