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Freezing of gait in PD: Prospective assessment in the DATATOP cohort.

OBJECTIVE: To study the development of freezing of gait in PD.

BACKGROUND: Freezing of gait is a common, disabling, and poorly understood
symptom in PD.

METHODS: The authors analyzed data from 800 patients with early PD from the
Deprenyl and Tocopherol Antioxidative Therapy of Parkinsonism (DATATOP)
clinical trial who were assigned either placebo, deprenyl, tocopherol, or
the combination of deprenyl and tocopherol.

The primary outcome measure was the time from randomization until the
freezing of gait score on the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale
(UPDRS) became positive.

RESULTS: 57 patients (7.1%) had freezing of gait at study entry and 193
(26%) of the remaining patients experienced the symptom by the end of the
follow-up period.

Those with freezing of gait at baseline had significantly more advanced
disease than those without the symptom, as measured by total UPDRS and
Hoehn and Yahr stage.

High baseline risk factors for developing freezing of gait during the
follow-up period were the onset of PD with a gait disorder; higher scores
of rigidity, postural instability, bradykinesia and speech; and longer
disease duration.

In contrast, tremor was strongly associated with a decreased risk for
freezing of gait.

At the end of follow-up, the signs most strongly associated with the
freezing phenomenon were gait, balance, and speech disorders, not rigidity
or bradykinesia.

Deprenyl treatment was strongly associated with a decreased risk for
developing freezing of gait; tocopherol had no effect.

CONCLUSIONS: Freezing of gait is directly related to duration of PD.

Risk factors at onset of disease are the absence of tremor and PD beginning
as a gait disorder.

The development of freezing of gait in the course of the illness is
strongly associated with the development of balance and speech problems,
less so with the worsening of bradykinesia, and is not associated with the
progression of rigidity.

These results support the concept that the freezing phenomenon is distinct
from bradykinesia.

Deprenyl, in the absence of L-dopa, was found to be an effective
prophylactic treatment and should be considered for patients with PD who
have an onset of gait difficulty.

Giladi N, McDermott MP, Fahn S, Przedborski S, Jankovic J, Stern M, Tanner C.
Movement Disorders Division (Drs. Giladi, Fahn, and Przedborski),
Department of Neurology, Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, New York.
1: Neurology 2001 Jun 26;56(12):1712-21
PMID: 11425939

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov:80/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list
_uids=11425939&dopt=Abstract

janet paterson: an akinetic rigid subtype, albeit perky, parky .
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