Regional and racial differences in the prevalence of physician-diagnosed essential tremor in the United States
โ Scribed by Elan D. Louis; Linda P. Fried; Annette L. Fitzpatrick; William T. Longstreth Jr.; Anne B. Newman
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 65 KB
- Volume
- 18
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-3185
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
For reasons that are unclear, prevalence estimates of essential tremor (ET) differ considerably across the United States. Separate communities have never been sampled within the framework of the same study to substantiate these differences. We estimated the prevalence of physicianโdiagnosed ET in the elderly in four communities in the United States in whom the same screening questions were used, and examined whether this prevalence differed between Caucasians and African Americans. The Cardiovascular Health Study recruited a sample of Medicare beneficiaries โฅ65 years of age from four communities in different regions of the United States. In 1998 to 1999, 3,494 participants (mean age, 80.0 years; range, 70โ103 years) answered a 12โquestion screen for ET, including the question, โhas a doctor diagnosed you as having familial tremor or benign essential tremor?โ Fiftyโfour participants reported that a doctor had diagnosed them as having ET (1.5%; 95% confidence interval, [CI], 1.1โ2.0%). Prevalence was similar across the four communities (1.1โ2.0%). A larger proportion of Caucasians than African Americans reported a diagnosis of ET (1.7% vs. 0.4%; odds ratio = 4.9; 95% CI, 1.2โ20.2; P = 0.028). In a logistic regression analysis, physicianโdiagnosed ET was associated with Caucasian ethnicity (P = 0.038) but not with age, gender, education, mental status or depression scores, income, smoking status, or alcohol consumption. When a standardized screening question was used, the proportion of participants with physicianโdiagnosed ET was similar across four communities, suggesting that the prevalence of this condition may be less variable than is often reported. Caucasians were five times more likely to have physicianโdiagnosed ET than were African Americans. This study does not provide an explanation for this difference, which deserves further study. ยฉ 2003 Movement Disorder Society
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