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The olfactory and cognitive deficits of parkinson's disease: Evidence for independence

✍ Scribed by Richard L. Doty; Manuel Riklan; Daniel A. Deems; Constance Reynolds; Stanley Stellar


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1989
Tongue
English
Weight
656 KB
Volume
25
Category
Article
ISSN
0364-5134

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✦ Synopsis


In the present study we sought to determine whether the olfactory deficits of parkinsonism are related to the cognitive and perceptual-motor manifestations of the disease. Pearson correlation coefficients were computed among a number of olfactory, neurologicai, and neuropsychological measures obtained from 58 Parkinson's disease patients, including the University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test, a modified Randt memory test, a reaction time test, a fingertapping test, ratings of motor and neurological function, and selected verbal and performance subtests of the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-Revised. Data from 38 patients with Parkinson's disease who received odor detection threshold testing were aiso evaluated. The intercorrelation matrix was subjected to a principai components factor anaiysis which yielded six clear-cut factors: cognitive/memory, gross motor, oral motor, fine motor, olfactory, and tremor. The olfactory factor received strong and nearly exclusive loadings from the olfactory measures (which did not evidence meaningful loadings on any of the other factors). A ten-trial jackknife procedure revealed the factor structure to be stable. Further support of the independence of the olfactory variables from the other measures was provided by multiple regression and canonicai correlation analyses. Overall, these findings lend support to the hypothesis that the olfactory disorder of parkinsonism is independent of the cognitive, perceptual-motor, and memory manifestations of the disease.


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