Circadian activity rhythm in Parkinson's disease: findings from the PHASE study

Circadian disruptions in Parkinson's disease (PD) are characterized as amplitude reduction rather than as phase shift; however, large-scale studies evaluating circadian rhythms between PD patients and non-PD older adults have not been performed. The present study aimed to compare the circadian...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sleep medicine 2021-09, Vol.85, p.8-14
Hauptverfasser: Obayashi, Kenji, Saeki, Keigo, Yamagami, Yuki, Kurumatani, Norio, Sugie, Kazuma, Kataoka, Hiroshi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Circadian disruptions in Parkinson's disease (PD) are characterized as amplitude reduction rather than as phase shift; however, large-scale studies evaluating circadian rhythms between PD patients and non-PD older adults have not been performed. The present study aimed to compare the circadian activity rhythm (CAR) between PD patients and non-PD older adults. In this cross-sectional study on 157 PD outpatients and 1111 community-dwelling older adults (controls), physical activity was measured using actigraphy at 1-min intervals over 6 days in PD patients and 2 days in non-PD older adults. Data were base-10 log-transformed and regretted to the sigmoidally transformed cosine curve. The mean amplitude (log counts/min) and acrophase were 1.85 (SD, 0.52) and 14:19 (SD, 1:15), respectively, in the controls (n = 1111); 1.42 (0.48) and 14:24 (1:20), respectively, in the early-stage (Hoehn–Yahr I and II) PD patients (n = 95); and 1.23 (0.54) and 13:41 (1:56), respectively, in the late-stage (Hoehn–Yahr III–V) PD patients (n = 62). Multivariable analysis revealed significantly lower amplitude in the early-stage and late-stage PD groups than in the controls. The acrophase significantly advanced in the late-stage PD group than in the controls. With the advancement of PD stage, amplitude and peak significantly decreased; trough increased; acrophase and active offset advanced; and robustness weakened. Compared with non-PD older adults, PD patients exhibited a phase advance in CAR, along with amplitude reduction. With an advanced stage of PD, a phase advance in CAR also occurred, along with amplitude reduction and weakened robustness. •This study suggested a phase advance in circadian activity rhythm in Parkinson's disease.•Also, circadian phase advance, amplitude reduction, and weakened robustness were observed in advanced stage.•These associations were independent of several potential confounding factors.
ISSN:1389-9457
1878-5506
DOI:10.1016/j.sleep.2021.06.023