| Literature DB >> 25642376 |
Marika Pane1, Elena Stacy Mazzone1, Serena Sivo1, Lavinia Fanelli1, Roberto De Sanctis1, Adele D'Amico2, Sonia Messina3, Roberta Battini4, Flaviana Bianco1, Marianna Scutifero5, Roberta Petillo5, Silvia Frosini4, Roberta Scalise1, Gian Luca Vita3, Claudio Bruno6, Marina Pedemonte6, Tiziana Mongini7, Elena Pegoraro8, Francesca Brustia9, Alice Gardani9, Angela Berardinelli9, Valentina Lanzillotta7, Emanuela Viggiano5, Filippo Cavallaro3, Maria Sframeli3, Luca Bello8, Andrea Barp8, Fabio Busato8, Serena Bonfiglio10, Enrica Rolle11, Giulia Colia2, Annamaria Bonetti2, Concetta Palermo1, Alessandra Graziano1, Grazia D'Angelo12, Antonella Pini10, Alice Corlatti13, Ksenija Gorni11, Giovanni Baranello13, Laura Antonaci14, Enrico Bertini2, Luisa Politano5, Eugenio Mercuri1.
Abstract
The Performance of Upper Limb (PUL) test was specifically developed for the assessment of upper limbs in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). The first published data have shown that early signs of involvement can also be found in ambulant DMD boys. The aim of this longitudinal Italian multicentric study was to evaluate the correlation between the 6 Minute Walk Test (6MWT) and the PUL in ambulant DMD boys. Both 6MWT and PUL were administered to 164 ambulant DMD boys of age between 5.0 and 16.17 years (mean 8.82). The 6 minute walk distance (6MWD) ranged between 118 and 557 (mean: 376.38, SD: 90.59). The PUL total scores ranged between 52 and 74 (mean: 70.74, SD: 4.66). The correlation between the two measures was 0.499. The scores on the PUL largely reflect the overall impairment observed on the 6MWT but the correlation was not linear. The use of the PUL appeared to be less relevant in the very strong patients with 6MWD above 400 meters, who, with few exceptions had near full scores. In patients with lower 6MWD the severity of upper limb involvement was more variable and could not always be predicted by the 6MWD value or by the use of steroids. Our results confirm that upper limb involvement can already be found in DMD boys even in the ambulant phase.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25642376 PMCID: PMC4208936 DOI: 10.1371/currents.md.a93d9904d57dcb08936f2ea89bca6fe6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Curr ISSN: 2157-3999