Frontiers in Neurology (Jul 2016)

Nonmotor symptoms in patients suffering from motor neuron diseases

  • Rene Günther,
  • Nicole Richter,
  • Anna Sauerbier,
  • Kallol Ray Chaudhuri,
  • Pablo Martinez-Martin,
  • Alexander Storch,
  • Alexander Storch,
  • Alexander Storch,
  • Andreas Hermann,
  • Andreas Hermann

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2016.00117
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

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Background: The recently postulated disease spreading hypothesis has gained much attention, especially for Parkinson’s disease (PD). The various nonmotor symptoms (NMS) in neurodegenerative diseases would be much better explained by this hypothesis than by the degeneration of disease-specific cell populations. Motor neuron disease (MND) is primarily known as a group of diseases with a selective loss of motor function. Recent evidence, however, suggests disease spreading into nonmotor brain regions also in MND. The aim of this study was to comprehensively detect NMS in patients suffering from MND.Methods: We used a self-rating questionnaire including 30 different items of gastrointestinal, autonomic, neuropsychiatric and sleep complaints (NMSQuest) which is an established tool in PD patients. 90 MND patients were included and compared to 96 controls.Results: In total, MND patients reported significantly higher NMS scores (median: 7 points) in comparison to controls (median: 4 points). Dribbling, impaired taste/smelling, impaired swallowing, weight loss, loss of interest, sad/blues, falling and insomnia were significantly more prevalent in MND patients compared to controls. Interestingly excessive sweating was more reported in the MND group. Correlation analysis revealed an increase of total NMS score with disease progression.Conclusions: NMS in MND patients seemed to increase with disease progression which would fit with the recently postulated disease spreading hypothesis. The total NMS score in the MND group significantly exceeded the score for the control group, but only 8 of the 30 single complaints of the NMSQuest were significantly more often reported by MND patients. Dribbling, impaired swallowing, weight loss and falling could primarily be connected to motor neuron degeneration and declared as motor symptoms in MND.

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