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1.
Front Neurol ; 11: 991, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33013654

RESUMO

Background: Mood disorder is common in cervical dystonia and can impact on quality of life. It often precedes the onset of cervical dystonia and does not improve with botulinum toxin therapy. Objective: To assess health-related quality of life in relation to mood disorder and measures of severity, disability and pain, in cervical dystonia patients receiving botulinum toxin therapy. Methods: In a single-center, University Hospital movement disorders clinic, we conducted a comprehensive, cross-sectional study of disease severity, non-motor symptoms, mood and health-related quality of life in patients with cervical dystonia receiving botulinum toxin therapy using TWSTRS-2 for pain, severity and disability; Beck Anxiety Inventory and Beck Depression Inventory. We assessed all variables in relation to health-related quality of life assessed by Cervical Dystonia Impact Profile-58 and the Euro-QoL Utility Index. Results: In 201 patients (136 women), mean age 61.5 years, significant determinants of impaired health related quality of life were: being a woman, reporting a history of anxiety or depression, prevalent pain, disability, anxiety and/or depression but not physician-assessed disease severity. Conclusion: Patient-reported measures of pain, disability and, most markedly, mood disorder, are significant factors affecting quality of life; these were totally unrelated to the neurologist-rated measure of disease severity. Mood disorders, the predominant predictor of quality of life, were not addressed in the botulinum toxin clinic.

2.
Clin Park Relat Disord ; 3: 100049, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34316634

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: Mood disorder is common in cervical dystonia, affects quality of life and may precede the onset of the dystonia. There is controversy as to whether mood disorder is part of the primary process or secondary to the disability.We assessed the characteristics of cervical dystonia patients in relation to a past history of mood disorder. METHODS: At a University Hospital clinic, in all consenting patients with cervical dystonia, we uniformly collected demographic data, medical history, and prospectively, measures of prevalent mood disorder. RESULTS: In 193 patients (128 women and 65 men) mean age at onset was 43.9 years and mean duration of cervical dystonia was 17.5 years. Men had earlier age at onset of cervical dystonia than women (p = 0.0037). A history of a mood disorder was reported in 53/128 (41%) women with a significantly earlier median age at onset of cervical dystonia (42 years) than 75/128 (59%) women with no history of mood disorder (48 years) (p = 0.005); 33 (26%) women with mood disorder prior to dystonia also had an earlier age at onset of dystonia than the 75 without such a history (p = 0.0154). A history of mood disorder was more common in women (41%) than men (31%); 54/128 (42%) women and 21/65 (32%) men had current mood disorder symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: In our cervical dystonia clinic population significant differences in the age at onset in women with, and without, a history of mood disorder strongly indicates that anxiety and depression are primary non-motor (and premotor) symptoms of cervical dystonia.

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