Publication | Open Access
Space deficits in Parkinson's disease patients: quantitative or qualitative differences from normal controls?
11
Citations
28
References
1993
Year
NeuropsychologyNormal ControlsBrain FunctionCorticobasal DegenerationMirror Image PatternsAttentionSocial SciencesNeurological FunctioningNeurologyNeuropathologyCognitive NeuroscienceMotor DisorderNeuropsychological FunctioningCognitive ScienceNeuroimagingRehabilitationDisease PatientsSpace DeficitsPd PatientsParkinson DiseaseProcedural MemoryNeuroscienceMedicine
Twenty-seven patients with idiopathic Parkinson's disease (PD) and the same number of normal controls (NCs) were studied on a test battery including five conceptual categories of spatial ability. The two groups of subjects were matched for age, sex, years of education, socioeconomic status and non-verbal (Raven Standard Progressive Matrices) intelligence. A multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) showed that the PD patients performed less efficiently on almost all the tasks. A logistic regression analysis (LRA) classified 81.48% of the subjects into the PD group and 92.59% into NC group, indicating that left-right and back-front Euclidean orientation, three dimensional mental rotation and visuospatial immediate recognition memory of mirror image patterns discriminate well between the two groups. Application of a structural model (confirmatory factor analysis) demonstrated that both PD patients and the NC group stemmed from a homogeneous population, suggesting that the differences found between the two groups are of a quantitative rather than of a qualitative nature.
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