Quality of Life in Huntington's Disease: A Comparative Study Investigating the Impact for those with Pre-Manifest and Early Manifest Disease, and their Partners

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Quality of Life in Huntington's Disease: A Comparative Study Investigating the Impact for those with Pre-Manifest and Early Manifest Disease, and their Partners
المؤلفون: Miranda J. Say, Alexandra Durr, Julie C. Stout, J Read, Damian Justo, Blair R. Leavitt, Eve M. Dumas, Gail Owen, Sarah J. Tabrizi, A. Coleman, Track-Hd Investigators, Rebecca Jones, Raymund A.C. Roos, David Craufurd
المصدر: Journal of Huntington's Disease. 2:159-175
بيانات النشر: IOS Press, 2013.
سنة النشر: 2013
مصطلحات موضوعية: Adult, Male, medicine.medical_specialty, Health Status, Psychological intervention, Prodromal Symptoms, Disease, Neuropsychological Tests, Cohort Studies, Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience, Quality of life, Huntington's disease, medicine, Humans, Sibling, Spouses, Psychiatry, Middle Aged, medicine.disease, humanities, Huntington Disease, Cohort, Quality of Life, Female, Neurology (clinical), Cognition Disorders, Psychology, Cohort study, Executive dysfunction, Clinical psychology
الوصف: BACKGROUND: Given the multifaceted nature of this inherited neurodegenerative condition, typically affecting adults in mid-life, it is perhaps not surprising that studies indicate poorer Health Related Quality of Life (HrQoL) in those with the gene-expansion and, by association, in their families. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to extend the current literature by exploring specific life domains, including at an earlier disease stage than usually reported in the HRQoL literature, and in a subgroup of gene-negative partners. METHODS: 355 participants from the TRACK-HD cohort (120 Controls, 118 Pre-HD and 117 early-HD) completed standardised self-report measures of HrQoL (SF36 and QoLI), underwent clinical assessments of capacity and motor function (UHDRS), semi structured interviews assessing neuropsychiatric symptoms (PBA-s), completed paper and computerized cognitive tasks and assessment of behaviours associated with damage to frontal brain circuits (FrSBe). RESULTS: Each gene-expanded group scored statistically significantly lower than gene-negative sibling controls on the SF36 General Health subscale; neuropsychiatric symptoms and executive dysfunction were associated with reduced HrQoL. Those with Stage II disease reported statistically significantly lower HrQoL than gene-negative controls across physical, emotional and social life domains. Those partnered with manifest participants reported lower HrQoL in the social domain compared to those partnered with at-risk participants furthest from disease onset; and perseverative symptoms in manifest partners were found to be related to lower HrQoL in their gene-negative partners. HrQoL in gene-negative partners of pre-manifest individuals was associated with pre-manifest individuals' neuropsychiatric and cognitive function. CONCLUSIONS: Understanding the nature and timing of disruption to the HrQoL in people who are pre-manifest and diagnosed with HD, and their gene-negative partners, can inform the development of appropriate strategies and interventions.
تدمد: 1879-6397
الوصول الحر: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::f3fc48d60730a2fcf3994902d0259555Test
https://doi.org/10.3233/jhd-130051Test
رقم الانضمام: edsair.doi.dedup.....f3fc48d60730a2fcf3994902d0259555
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE