Document detail
ID

oai:HAL:hal-04334806v1

Topic
[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]
Author
Cavallieri, Francesco Di Rauso, Giulia Gessani, Annalisa Budriesi, Carla Fioravanti, Valentina Contardi, Sara Menozzi, Elisa Pinto, Serge Moro, Elena Antonelli, Francesca Valzania, Franco
Langue
en
Editor

HAL CCSD;Frontiers

Category

CNRS - Centre national de la recherche scientifique

Year

2023

listing date

12/15/2023

Keywords
upper parkinson phonation extremity study 0 disease advanced tapping patients
Metrics

Abstract

Background Very few studies have assessed the presence of a possible correlation between speech variables and limb bradykinesia in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD).

The objective of this study was to find correlations between different speech variables and upper extremity bradykinesia under different medication conditions in advanced PD patients.

Methods Retrospective data were collected from a cohort of advanced PD patients before and after an acute levodopa challenge.

Each patient was assessed with a perceptual-acoustic analysis of speech, which included several quantitative parameters [i.e., maximum phonation time (MPT) and intensity (dB)]; the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) (total scores, subscores, and items); and a timed test (a tapping test for 20 s) to quantify upper extremity bradykinesia.

Pearson's correlation coefficient was applied to find correlations between the different speech variables and the tapping rate.

Results A total of 53 PD patients [men: 34; disease duration: 10.66 (SD 4.37) years; age at PD onset: 49.81 years (SD 6.12)] were included.

Levodopa intake increased the MPT of sustained phonation ( p < 0.01), but it reduced the speech rate ( p = 0.05).

In the defined-OFF condition, MPT of sustained phonation positively correlated with both bilateral mean ( p = 0.044, r -value:0.299) and left ( p = 0.033, r -value:0.314) tapping.

In the defined-ON condition, the MPT correlated positively with bilateral mean tapping ( p = 0.003), left tapping ( p = 0.003), and right tapping ( p = 0.008).

Conclusion This study confirms the presence of correlations between speech acoustic variables and upper extremity bradykinesia in advanced PD patients.

These findings suggest common pathophysiological mechanisms.

Cavallieri, Francesco,Di Rauso, Giulia,Gessani, Annalisa,Budriesi, Carla,Fioravanti, Valentina,Contardi, Sara,Menozzi, Elisa,Pinto, Serge,Moro, Elena,Antonelli, Francesca,Valzania, Franco, 2023, A study on the correlations between acoustic speech variables and bradykinesia in advanced Parkinson's disease, HAL CCSD;Frontiers

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