Abstract
Objectives
to investigate in Parkinson's Disease affected patients a correlation between hyposmia and gastrointestinal dysfunction and their possible identical etiopathogenesis.
Design
retrospective cohort study.
Setting
ENT and Neurology departments (Gemelli Hospital, Rome, Italy).
Participants
78 patients with diagnosis of PD according to the UK Brain Bank criteria. Inclusion criteria: informed consent; olfactory testing executed; exclusion criteria: signs of dementia according to the DSM-IV criteria; Mini Mental State Examination score ≤ 26; head trauma; central neurological disorders, nasal or systemic diseases potentially affecting olfactory function. Motor condition was assessed by means of Hoehn and Yahr staging and by section III of the Unified PD Rating Scale, performed off and on medications.
Main outcome measures
the patients underwent olfactory evaluation (TDI score), after rhinomanometry with nasal decongestion. 25 non-motor symptoms were evaluated trough an interview.
Results
olfactory dysfunction was objectively found in 91.0% of patients, a percentage higher than the subjective hyposmia reported (55.1%) p=0.0001. 7 patients (9.0%) were normosmic, 49 (62.8%) hyposmic, 22 (28.2%) anosmic. Subjective hyposmia, constipation, bloating and dyspepsia differed across groups, being higher in anosmic and hyposmic ones than in the normosmic group. p value was ≤ 0.05 for each symptom. Despite the original results, this study has the limitation of being based on subjective ratings by a relatively limited group of patients.
Conclusions
Hyposmia and gastrointestinal symptoms are correlated and this would support a possible common origin; the CNS could be reached through two different pathways, both starting in the peripheral nervous system.
This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
http://ift.tt/2hfsiIm
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου