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Quantification of the Cardinal Signs of Parkinsonism and of Associated Disability in Spouses of Sufferers
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1993
Year
Family MedicineCorticobasal DegenerationDisabilityAssociated DisabilityKinesiologyNeuropathologyMotor DisorderHealth SciencesGross Clinical DefinitionPsychiatryGeriatricsCardinal SignsProgressive Supranuclear PalsyRehabilitationPhysical TherapySelective MatingParkinson DiseaseIdiopathic ParkinsonismPathological GaitStereotypic Movement DisorderHuman MovementMedicinePsychopathology
Work on the causation of idiopathic parkinsonism is limited by relying on gross clinical definition and lack of studies in the old. A prognostic index for parkinsonism, based on hypo/bradykinesia of gait, had considerably higher values in spouses of 20 aged suffers, who had been cohabiting for about half a century, than in 40 controls. Postural abnormality, measured by standing sway and foot separation during walking, was also greater in these spouses. Marked differences remained after correction for relevant covariates. A blinded rigidity rating was greater in the spouses of sufferers, tremor rating was not. The differences found are difficult to explain by selective mating, learned or reactive behaviour. This suggests that environmental causative influences operate in adult life.