Laryngeal symptoms related to motor phenotypes in Parkinson's disease: A systematic review

Author:

Thijs Zoe1ORCID,Dumican Matthew2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders Molloy University Rockville Centre New York USA

2. Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences Western Michigan University Kalamazoo Michigan USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveThis study aimed to systematically review the associations between motor clinical phenotypes in Parkinson's disease (PD) and laryngeal disease symptoms. Laryngeal dysfunctions such as dysphonia and dysphagia are ubiquitous in people with Parkinson's disease (PwPD). Similar to other disease symptoms, they manifest variably across PwPD. Some of the variability within PD has been explained by clinical phenotypes. However, it is unclear how laryngeal symptoms of PD express themselves across these phenotypes.MethodsFive databases were searched (MEDLINE, CINAHL, Web of Science, Embase, Scopus) in May 2022. After the removal of duplicates, all retrieved records were screened. Cohort, case–control, and cross‐sectional studies in English discussing laryngeal symptoms and clinical PD phenotypes were included. Data were extracted, tabulated, and assessed using Moola et al.'s (2021) appraisal tool for systematic reviews of risk and etiology.ResultsThe search retrieved 2370 records, representing 540 PwPD. After the removal of duplicates and screening, eight articles were included for review. The most common phenotype categories were tremor‐dominant and postural‐instability gait disordered (PIGD). Five studies addressed vocal characteristics, while four considered swallowing. Differences and lack of rigor in methodology across studies complicated conclusions, but a tendency for tremor‐dominant phenotypes to present with less severe laryngeal symptoms was found.ConclusionSome minor differences in laryngeal function were found between tremor‐dominant and PIGD phenotypes in PD. However, there is a need for more standardized and high‐quality studies when comparing motor phenotypes for laryngeal function.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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