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Application of the continuous scale physical functional performance test to people with parkinson disease

Publication ,  Journal Article
Schenkman, M; Cutson, TM; Kuchibhatla, M; Scott, BL; Cress, EM
Published in: Neurology Report
January 1, 2002

Parkinson disease PD is a chronic progressive neurological disorder, often resulting in substantial limitation of function. A number of self-report and performance-based measures have been used to quantify change of disease state or function in people who have PD. These measures have limitations when used to quantify function in individuals in the early or mid-stages of PD, especially in people with preclinical levels of functional difficulty. The purpose of this paper is to 1 review tests and measures currently available to quantify functional limitations of those with PD: 2 determine reliability and concurrent validity of a new measure, the Continuous Scale Physical Functional Performance CSPFP test applied to those with PD. Participants were 42 independent, community-dwelling adults with idiopathic PD. Mean SD age was 63.7 11.5: 31.7% were women. Participants completed self-report measures of function, the CS-PFP, and 3 other performance-based tests Functional Reach, Timed Up and Go, 360° turn. Ten participants were tested twice on the CS-PFP, one week apart. The CS-PFP was found to be a reliable measure of physical function in the early and mid-stages of PD k = 0.95. The CS-PFP correlated moderately strongly with other self-report measures eg, United Parkinson Disease Rating Scale UPDRS r = -.62, p =.0001: Northwestern University Disability Scale, r =.43, p =.006 and with performance based measures eg, Functional Reach, r =.70, p =.0001:Timed Up and Go, r = -.69, p =.0001. Multivariate analysis showed the UPDRS to be a predictor of CS-PFP score. The regression model including control variables of age, sex, depression, and pain explained over 50% of the variance in CS-PFP: age and UPDRS scores were the significant predictors. The CS-PFP is a reliable and valid measure for determining physical function in individuals who are in the early and mid-stages of PD. This scale identified substantial functional decline to a greater extent than other scales specific to PD. © 2002 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Neurology Report

DOI

ISSN

1085-049X

Publication Date

January 1, 2002

Volume

26

Issue

3

Start / End Page

130 / 138
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Schenkman, M., Cutson, T. M., Kuchibhatla, M., Scott, B. L., & Cress, E. M. (2002). Application of the continuous scale physical functional performance test to people with parkinson disease. Neurology Report, 26(3), 130–138. https://doi.org/10.1097/01253086-200226030-00004
Schenkman, M., T. M. Cutson, M. Kuchibhatla, B. L. Scott, and E. M. Cress. “Application of the continuous scale physical functional performance test to people with parkinson disease.” Neurology Report 26, no. 3 (January 1, 2002): 130–38. https://doi.org/10.1097/01253086-200226030-00004.
Schenkman M, Cutson TM, Kuchibhatla M, Scott BL, Cress EM. Application of the continuous scale physical functional performance test to people with parkinson disease. Neurology Report. 2002 Jan 1;26(3):130–8.
Schenkman, M., et al. “Application of the continuous scale physical functional performance test to people with parkinson disease.” Neurology Report, vol. 26, no. 3, Jan. 2002, pp. 130–38. Scopus, doi:10.1097/01253086-200226030-00004.
Schenkman M, Cutson TM, Kuchibhatla M, Scott BL, Cress EM. Application of the continuous scale physical functional performance test to people with parkinson disease. Neurology Report. 2002 Jan 1;26(3):130–138.

Published In

Neurology Report

DOI

ISSN

1085-049X

Publication Date

January 1, 2002

Volume

26

Issue

3

Start / End Page

130 / 138