Diabetes is associated with postural instability and gait difficulty in Parkinson disease

糖尿病与帕金森病患者的姿势不稳和步态困难有关。

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Comorbid diabetes may be associated with more severe motor impairment in Parkinson disease. In normal elderly individuals, diabetes is associated with parkinsonian features, including gait difficulty and rigidity, though not tremor. Whether diabetes contributes to increased motor dysfunction in Parkinson disease by exacerbating nigrostriatal dopaminergic denervation or through intensification of extranigral pathology is unknown. METHODS: We performed a case-control study (n = 39) involving 13 Parkinson disease subjects (age 66.4yrs ± 5.5; duration of disease 6.9yrs ± 4.4) with diabetes and 26 age, gender, and duration-of-disease-matched Parkinson disease controls without diabetes. All subjects underwent [(11)C]dihydrotetrabenazine vesicular monoamine transporter type-2 positron emission tomography imaging to assess striatal dihydrotetrabenazine distribution volume ratio and Unified Parkinson disease rating scale motor examination to determine rigidity, bradykinesia, tremor, and postural instability and gait difficulty subscores. Magnetic resonance imaging scans were analyzed to assess leukoaraiosis burden. RESULTS: After controlling for nigrostriatal dopaminergic denervation, Parkinson disease subjects with diabetes displayed greater postural instability and gait difficulty subscores (t = 3.81, p = 0.0005). There were no differences in bradykinesia, rigidity, or tremor subscores between cases and controls. The association between diabetes and postural instability and gait difficulty persisted after controlling for comorbid hypertension and body mass index. Leukoaraiosis, distal vibratory sense, and levodopa dose equivalents did not differ significantly between cases and controls. CONCLUSIONS: Diabetes may contribute to postural instability and gait difficulty in Parkinson disease through mechanisms other than nigrostriatal dopaminergic denervation.

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