Although essential tremor (ET) is considered the most prevalent adult movement disorder, the available information on its prevalence and distribution worldwide is not completely understood. We investigated the prevalence and distribution of ET in three elderly Spanish populations using a door-to-door, two-phase approach. A brief screening instrument was administered on May 1, 1994 to subjects over 64 years old taken from the census of one urban municipality of Greater Madrid (quarter of Margaritas, Getafe), one urban district of Madrid (Lista), and one rural site (Arévalo county, Avila) (N = 5278). Study subjects were limited to those who screened positively (N = 472). To increase reliability, each patient was examined by 3 experienced neurologists, and was classified as having ET only when all 3 neurologists agreed (183 of 472). The present study was part of a large-scale epidemiological survey of neurological diseases, and served as a baseline investigation in a 3-year incidence study. Accordingly, 41 ET patients were identified when evaluating subjects who had screened positively for dementia, stroke, or parkinsonism, despite the fact that they had screened negatively for tremor; furthermore, 32 additional ET prevalent cases were detected when evaluating subjects who had screened positively for tremor in the second cross-sectional study (May 1, 1997), although they had screened negatively for tremor in the first cross-sectional study. We identified 256 persons (152 women, 104 men) with ET; of these, 87 patients (34.0%) reported having an affected relative. Two hundred and four (79.7%) of the subjects with ET were detected through this screening and had not been diagnosed previously. The prevalence of ET was 4.8% (95% CI = 4.2-5.4) for the total population; 4.6% (95% CI = 3.7-5.4) in men and 5.0% (95% CI = 4.2-5.8) in women. Age-specific prevalence increased with advancing age for both men and women. Despite the variability in worldwide data, ET is a frequently encountered disorder in elderly people. Furthermore, as ET may be seen as a relatively benign condition, a large proportion of patients may never seek neurological attention.
The prevalence of Parkinson's disease (PD) and other types of parkinsonism in three elderly populations of central Spain was investigated using a door-to-door, two-phase approach. This design called for the administration of a brief questionnaire to subjects 65 years of age or older taken from the census of one urban municipality of Greater Madrid (Margaritas, Getafe), one rural site (Arévalo County, Avila), and one urban district of Madrid (Lista) in Spain (N = 5,278). Study neurologists extensively investigated those subjects who screened positively. The diagnoses, based on specified criteria, were reviewed to increase reliability across neurologists. We found 118 subjects with parkinsonism: 81 affected by PD (68.6%), 26 drug-induced parkinsonism (22.0%), 6 parkinsonism in dementia (5.1%), 3 vascular parkinsonism (2.5%), and 2 unspecified parkinsonism (1.7%). The prevalence was 2.2% (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.8-2.6) for all types of parkinsonism and 1.5% (95% CI, 1.2-1.8) for PD. The prevalence estimates of parkinsonism and PD increased with age, declining at 85 years and over. Age prevalence ratios were higher for men. Twenty-three subjects (28.4%) of the subjects with PD were detected through the screening and had not been diagnosed previously. Overall prevalence estimates of PD and other types of parkinsonism in central Spain rank at levels similar to those recently reported for other European and non-European elderly populations. Despite improvement in access to health services, an important proportion of PD patients may never seek neurological attention.
Screening tools for cognitive decline still have low accuracy for dementia, mainly in cases of mild dementia. All of them are affected by factors such as age, sex, educational level, sensory deficits and several mental disorders. The information provided by a proxy close to the patient has been used during recent years in dementia diagnosis. Therefore, new questionnaires, which use standardized information from relatives, have been developed. The aim of this study was to validate a Spanish version (S-IQCODE) of the Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly (IQCODE), a dementia screening questionnaire in Spanish population-based samples. A validity study of the screening tool was carried out in two population-based samples of community-dwelling elderly with different sociodemographic characteristics (urban and rural samples). Dementia diagnosis was performed by neurologists according to DSM-III-R criteria. The S-IQCODE showed a higher accuracy than the MMSE in both samples: sensitivity of 82% and 83% vs 73% and 83%, specificity of 90% and 83% vs 78% and 74%, accuracy of 89% and 83% vs 77% and 75%. Moreover, while the S-IQCODE did not have associations with any extraneous factors, the MMSE showed significant correlations with age (-0.51), educational level (0.62), mental health (-0.40), premorbid intelligence (0.67) and intellectual level (0.75). The results obtained with the S-IQCODE show that it could possibly be applied in screening for dementia in community-dwelling elderly.
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