The Unified Huntington's Disease Rating Scale (UHDRS) was developed as a clinical rating scale to assess four domains of clinical performance and capacity in HD: motor function, cognitive function, behavioral abnormalities, and functional capacity. We assessed the internal consistency and the intercorrelations for the four domains and examined changes in ratings over time. We also performed an interrater reliability study of the motor assessment. We found there was a high degree of internal consistency within each of the domains of the UHDRS and that there were significant intercorrelations between the domains of the UHDRS, with the exception of the total behavioral score. There was an excellent degree of interrater reliability for the motor scores. Our limited longitudinal database indicates that the UHDRS may be useful for tracking changes in the clinical features of HD over time. The UHDRS assesses relevant clinical features of HD and appears to be appropriate for repeated administration during clinical studies.
Institutionalized patients with HD are more motorically, psychiatrically, and behaviorally impaired than their counterparts living at home. However, motor variables alone predicted institutionalization. Treatment strategies that delay the progression of motor dysfunction in HD may postpone the need for institutionalization.
Multiple sclerosis is a demyelinating disease of the central nervous system, often producing abnormalities in sexual function and urinary control. Eighty-six patients with this disorder were referred to our neurourologic facilities for evaluation (45 women and 41 men). Symptomatic voiding dysfunction was present in 84 patients (97 per cent). Sexual dysfunction was present in 29 of the 41 men (71 per cent). Neurourologic evaluation was performed by rapid-fill carbon dioxide cystometry and perineal floor needle electromyography. Several neurourologic patterns were identified in multiple sclerosis patients: the most common cystometry pattern was detrusor hyperreflexia (76 per cent) and the most common electromyography finding was vesico-sphincter dyssynergia (50 per cent). Voiding symptoms alone were not found to correlate with neurourologic findings. The presence of bilateral extensor plantar reflexes was found to indicate the possibility of vesico-sphincter dyssynergia. The addition of sacral-evoked responses to the neurourologic evaluation was useful in the identification and localization of occult sacral cord pathology and was of special significance to men with sexual dysfunction undergoing evaluation for neurogenic impotence. The combination of abnormal perineal electromyography, abnormal sacral latency and detrusor hyperreflexia was suggestive of multilevel spinal cord dysfunction and, possibly, has diagnostic as well as therapeutic significance. Neurourologic patterns were found to change in 4 of 9 patients re-evaluated because of symptom changes or poor treatment responses. Neurourologic testing in multiple sclerosis patients may be used to identify pathologic lesions, characterize sexual and voiding dysfunctions, corroborate neurologic diagnosis in doubtful cases and form a basis for rational treatment planning.
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