Parkinson's Disease (Jan 2012)

Confirmatory Factor Analysis of the Motor Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale

  • Stefanie D. Vassar,
  • Yvette M. Bordelon,
  • Ron D. Hays,
  • Natalie Diaz,
  • Rebecca Rausch,
  • Cherry Mao,
  • Barbara G. Vickrey

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/719167
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2012

Abstract

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The motor examination section of the unified Parkinson’s disease rating scale (UPDRS) is widely used in research but few studies have examined whether subscales exist that tap relatively distinct motor abnormalities. We analyzed data from 193 persons enrolled in a population-based study in Central California. Patients were examined after overnight PD medication washout (“OFF” state) and approximately one hour after taking medication (“ON” state). We performed confirmatory factor analysis of the UPDRS for OFF and ON state examinations; correlations, reliability, and relative validity of resulting subscales were evaluated. A model with five factors (gait/posture, tremor, rigidity, bradykinesia affecting the left extremities, bradykinesia affecting the right extremities) fit the data well, with similar results for OFF and ON states. Internal consistency reliability coefficients were 0.90 or higher for all subscales. The gait/posture subscale most strongly discriminated across levels of patient reported PD symptom severity and of how PD affects them on a daily basis. Compared to the right sided bradykinesia subscale, the left sided bradykinesia subscale had higher discrimination across levels of self-reported PD symptom severity and functional impairment. This supports motor UPDRS containing multiple subscales that can be analyzed separately and provide information distinct from the total score that may be useful in clinical studies.