Abstract

Essential tremor (ET) is associated with physical and cognitive impairments, as well as embarrassment, avoidance of social settings, and related difficulties that negatively impact the lives of patients. In similar disease contexts, burden on friends and relatives acting as caregivers has been noted and has well-documented implications. There has been no study examining caregiver burden related to ET. Data were gathered from 55 ET participants enrolled in a clinical study and their caregivers. The Zarit Burden Interview was used to assess caregiver burden. To assess clinical features that may be associated with burden, we collected several variables including the Montreal Cognitive Assessment, self-reported tremor disability, a videotaped neurological examination, questionnaires assessing ET participants' suffering, caregivers' perceptions of that suffering, and both caregiver and ET participant depressive symptoms. Spearman's correlations were performed between caregiver burden and clinical features, and we created a multivariate linear regression model predicting caregiver burden. Many ET caregivers provide little to no care and experience little to no burden. However, some caregivers (11%) provide over 25 h of care/week, and 13% experience high levels of burden. Caregivers most commonly provided assistance with writing and cooking. Increased burden was associated with the ET participants' decreased cognition, more caregiving tasks, more hours/week of caregiving activities, a longer duration of care, more ET participant falls/year, more medications taken by the ET participant, and more depressive symptoms in both the ET participant and the caregiver (all p < 0.05). ET participants' suffering and their caregivers' perceptions of suffering were both associated with increased burden. Neither tremor severity score nor self-reported tremor disability score was associated with increased caregiver burden. Using a multivariate linear regression model, we found that caregivers' increased perception of their partners' suffering was the best predictor of caregiver burden. While not all relatives and friends of ET patients provide extensive care or experience high burden, there is a group reporting high levels of caregiver burden that requires the attention and counseling of clinicians. This burden is associated with primarily non-tremor symptoms of ET and with caregivers' perception that their partners are suffering.

Highlights

  • Essential tremor (ET) is a progressive neurological disease that can have a significant impact on patients’ activities and life satisfaction [1]

  • The cohort of ET participants for these analyses of caregiver burden came from a larger longitudinal study of cognitive function in ET that began in July 2014 (Clinical Pathological Study of Cognitive Impairment in Essential Tremor, NINDS R01NS086736)

  • This study sought to understand the level of caregiver burden in ET, to discover the clinical correlates of such burden, and to investigate the relationship between perceived patient suffering and burden

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Summary

Introduction

Essential tremor (ET) is a progressive neurological disease that can have a significant impact on patients’ activities and life satisfaction [1]. ET patients may experience functional disability [2] and diminished quality of life [3]. ET patients may experience a host of additional nontremor symptoms [6] including problems with balance [7,8,9], cognitive impairment compared with healthy controls [10,11,12], and sleep dysregulation [10, 13]. Specific cognitive deficits in ET include impairments in executive function, working memory, verbal memory, and language [14, 15]. Essential tremor (ET) is associated with physical and cognitive impairments, as well as embarrassment, avoidance of social settings, and related difficulties that negatively impact the lives of patients. There has been no study examining caregiver burden related to ET

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