Abstract

Objective To survey the prevalence and distribution of sleep disorders in patients with Parkinson disease (PD) and to analyze the influencing factors. Methods The prevalence and distribution of sleep disorders were surveyed with Parkinson Disease Sleep Scale (PDSS) among 206 PD patients. The association of sleep disorders with age, course of disease, cognitive function, motor function, depression, and the equivalent dose of levodopa (LED) was analyzed. Results The overall PDSS score in 206 patients was (116.9±21.4). The three most frequent items of sleep disorders were the overall sleep quality(181/206, 87.9%), difficulty in maintaining sleep(160/206, 77.7%)and nocturnal enuresis(151/206, 73.3%); the three least frequent items were early awaking(87/206, 42.2%), urinary incontinence(56/206, 27.2%)and hallucination(44/206, 21.4%). The three items with the lowest average scores were nocturnal enuresis(6.9±3.1), difficulty in maintaining of sleep(7.1±2.7)and overall sleep quality(7.1±2.0); three items with the highest average scores were audiovisual illusion(9.3±1.8), incontinence caused by motion disability(9.0±2.1) and early awaking with upper and lower limb pain(8.7±2.1). PD patients were divided into group 1 [Hoehn-Yahr(HY F=3.27, P=0.04) between group 1 and group 3. The linear regression analysis showed that the HAMD and the LED scores had the greatest influence on PDSS score (R2=0.142, 0.196). Conclusion PD patients have a variety of sleep symptoms. The treatment of large doses of dopamine and depression contribute to the occurrence of PD sleep disorders. Key words: Parkinson disease; Sleep disorders; Depression; Questionnaires

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call