| Literature DB >> 32925108 |
Anouk van der Heide1,2, Marjan J Meinders3, Bastiaan R Bloem1, Rick C Helmich1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has many consequences for people with Parkinson's disease (PD). Social distancing measures complicate regular care and result in lifestyle changes, which may indirectly cause psychological stress and worsening of PD symptoms.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Parkinson’s disease; psychological distress; surveys and questionnaires
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32925108 PMCID: PMC7683090 DOI: 10.3233/JPD-202251
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Parkinsons Dis ISSN: 1877-7171 Impact factor: 5.568
Fig. 1Timeline: The relationship between the number of initially reported COVID-19 related deaths and measures taken in response. Also shown is the timeline of the baseline survey acquisition which is reported in the current article. WHO, World Health Organization; CBS, the Dutch ‘Central Bureau of Statistics’.
Characteristics of the study population
| General characteristics | Responders ( | Non-responders ( | Difference | ||
| Mean (SD) or n (%) | Mean (SD) or n (%) | ||||
| Age (years) | 62.8 (9.0) | 63.3 (9.1) | |||
| Gender (% women) | 138 (38.5%) | 62 (44.3%) | |||
| Disease duration (years) | 3.9 (1.8) | 4.3 (2.0) | |||
| Use of dopaminergic medication (% yes) | 93.9% | 97.9% | |||
| Presence of other medical conditions (% yes) | 67.3% | 66.4% | |||
| Assessment at last PPP visit (on average 7.5 months | |||||
| Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale | |||||
| MDS-UPDRS I | 12.0 (5.4) | 13.6 (5.7) | |||
| MDS-UPDRS II | 8.3 (5.9) | 9.8 (6.8) | |||
| MDS-UPDRS self-assessment (Ib + II) | 17.7 (8.5) | 20.4 (9.5) | |||
| MDS-UPDRS III On PD medication | 29.5 (12.6) | 30.9 (12.5) | |||
| MDS-UPDRS III Off PD medication | 34.8 (12.9) | 35.0 (13.7) | |||
| Hoehn & Yahr | On state | Off state | On state | Off state | On state |
| 1 | 14 (3.9%) | 15 (4.2%) | 6 (4.3%) | 6 (4.3%) | |
| 2 | 311 (86.9%) | 308 (86.0%) | 120 (85.7%) | 117 (83.6%) | Off state |
| 3 | 9 (2.5%) | 30 (8.4%) | 8 (5.7%) | 13 (9.3%) | |
| 4 | 4 (1.1%) | 45(1.4%) | 2 (1.4%) | 3 (2.1%) | |
| Missing | 20 (5.6%) | 0 (0%) | 4 (2.9%) | 1 (0.7%) | |
| Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) | 26.8 (2.4) | 26.0 (3.4) | |||
| State Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) | 70.8 (18.1) | 79.4 (21.8) | |||
| Beck’s Depression Inventory II (BDI-II) | 9.9 (6.3) | 12.6 (7.7) | |||
| Scales for Outcomes in PD (SCOPA-sleep) | 7.6 (5.0) | 8.9 (5.6) | |||
| Years of education | 12.9 (2.7) | 12.9 (2.8) | |||
| Living situation | |||||
| With partner | 64.8% | 65.7% | |||
| With family | 24.3% | 20.3% | |||
| Alone | 7.5% | 9.1% | |||
| Other | 3.4% | 4.9% | |||
| Paid job (% yes) | 39.1% | 35.0% | |||
| Assessment during COVID-19 survey (on average 1.4 months after introduction of social distancing measures) | |||||
| MDS-UPDRS self-assessment (Ib+II) | 16.5 (9.4) | ||||
| Social Support (SOZU-K) | 31.4 (5.1) | ||||
| Brief Resilience Scale (BRS) | 3.5 (0.7) | ||||
| Optimism (5-point scale) | 4.0 (0.8) | ||||
| Positive appraisal style (CERQ &COPE) | 11.9 (2.6) | ||||
| Behavioral coping style (CERQ &COPE) | 20.1 (4.2) | ||||
| Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) | 9.9 (5.8) | ||||
| Parkinson Anxiety Scale (PAS part B) | 5.8 (2.0) | ||||
| Ruminative Response Scale (RRS) | 1.9 (2.0) | ||||
| Neuroticism (BFI-neuroticism) | 4.9 (1.9) | ||||
Mean (SD) or number (percentages) for demographic and clinical characteristics, and total scores of the scales used in our COVID-19 survey. Column 3 shows the p-values for differences between non-responders and responders, for continuous variables measured with t-tests and for categorical variables with χ2-tests. We indicated all significant differences of p < 0.05 with *.
Fig. 2Relationship between stressor load, psychological distress, and PD symptom severity (A) The positive linear relationships between the three factors of the mediation analysis. (B) The standardized regression coefficients for the relationship between cumulative stressor load (total of experienced COVID-related stressors weighted by the experienced burden; range = 0–71) and self-assessed symptom severity (sum of MDS-UPDRS Ib and MSD-UPDRS II score; range = 2–53) as mediated by perceived stress (PSS score; range = 0–28) The direct effect is indicated by c’, the indirect effect by a*b, the total effect by c (*p < 0.001).
Fig. 3Change in PD symptom severity during COVID-19 pandemic. Changes in PD symptom severity of 13 problems which are common in PD during the COVID-19 pandemic, as compared to a month before the pandemic started (n = 358). The colored boxplots show responses on the 9-point scale (1 = much worse, 5 = no change, 9 = much improved). The percentages at the right side of the boxplots show percentages of people that experienced worsening (scores of 1–4), no change (scores of 5) and improvement (scores of 6–9) for every of these symptoms. Symptoms are ordered by how much they got worse during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Associations between psychological distress (PSS) and hypothesized resilience factors
| Hypothesized factors influencing psychological distress | Correlation with psychological distress (PSS) | |
| Pearson’s R [95% CI] | ||
| General characteristics | ||
| Age (years) | ||
| Biological sex | p = 0.451 | |
| Physical activity (minutes per week) | ||
| Clinical characteristics | ||
| PD disease duration (years) | ||
| PD symptom severity in daily life (MDS-UPDRS Ib + II) | ||
| Anxiety | ||
| Parkinson Anxiety Scale (PAS part B) | ||
| State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI)1 | ||
| Ruminative Response Scale (RRS) | ||
| Cognitive abilities (MoCA)1 | ||
| Depression (BDI-II)1 | ||
| Sleeping problems (SCOPA-sleep)1 | ||
| Stressor load | ||
| Cumulative stressor load | ||
| Personality traits | ||
| Perceived social support (SOZU-K) | ||
| Brief Resilience Scale (BRS) | ||
| Optimism (5-point scale) | ||
| Neuroticism (BFI-neuroticism) | ||
| Positive appraisal style (CERQ &COPE) | ||
| Behavioral coping style (CERQ &COPE) | ||
Bold values significant correlations at p < 0.05 (p < 0.0029 after Bonferroni correction). 1 measurement at last PPP assessment on average 7.5 months before the COVID-19 survey, not added in the survey. Pearson correlation values and their confidence intervals between psychological distress (score on Perceived Stress Scale (PSS)) and several general and clinical characteristics, stressor load and personality traits.