Defining Speech Subtypes in De Novo Parkinson Disease: Response to Long-term Levodopa Therapy

dc.contributor.author Rusz J.
dc.contributor.author Tykalová T.
dc.contributor.author Novotný M.
dc.contributor.author Zogala D.
dc.contributor.author Šonka K.
dc.contributor.author Růžička E.
dc.contributor.author Dušek P.
dc.date.accessioned 2026-02-05T15:13:49Z
dc.date.issued 2021
dc.description.abstract Background and objectives: Patterns of speech disorder in Parkinson disease (PD), which are highly variable across individual patients, have not been systematically studied. Our aim was to identify speech subtypes in treatment-naive patients with PD and to examine their response to long-term dopaminergic therapy. Methods: We recorded speech data from a total of 111 participants with de novo PD; 83 of the participants completed the 12-month follow-up (69 patients with PD on stable dopaminergic medication and 14 untreated controls with PD). Unsupervised k-means cluster analysis was performed on 8 distinctive parameters of hypokinetic dysarthria examined with quantitative acoustic analysis. Results: Three distinct speech subtypes with similar prevalence, symptom duration, and motor severity were detected: prosodic, phonatory-prosodic, and articulatory-prosodic. Besides monopitch and monoloudness, which were common in each subtype, speech impairment was more severe in the phonatory-prosodic subtype with predominant dysphonia and the articulatory-prosodic subtype with predominant imprecise consonant articulation than in the prosodic subtype. Clinically, the prosodic subtype was characterized by a prevalence of women and younger age, while articulatory-prosodic subtype was characterized by the prevalence of men, older age, greater severity of axial gait symptoms, and poorer cognitive performance. The phonatory-prosodic subtype clinically represented intermediate status in age with mostly men and preserved cognitive performance. While speech of untreated controls with PD deteriorated over 1 year (p = 0.02), long-term dopaminergic medication maintained stable speech impairment severity in the prosodic and articulatory-prosodic subtypes and improved speech performance in patients with the phonatory-prosodic subtype (p = 0.002).
dc.identifier V3S-353495
dc.identifier.citation RUSZ, J., et al. Defining Speech Subtypes in De Novo Parkinson Disease: Response to Long-term Levodopa Therapy. Neurology. 2021, 97(21), E2124-E2135. ISSN 0028-3878. DOI 10.1212/WNL.0000000000012878.
dc.identifier.doi 10.1212/WNL.0000000000012878
dc.identifier.issn 0028-3878 (print)
dc.identifier.issn 1526-632X (online)
dc.identifier.scopus 2-s2.0-85119979452
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10467/178532
dc.identifier.wos 000736051600020
dc.language.iso eng
dc.publisher American Academy of Neurology
dc.relation.ispartof Neurology
dc.relation.uri https://n.neurology.org/content/97/21/e2124.long
dc.rights.access restrictedAccess
dc.subject Acoustic analysis en
dc.subject dysarthria en
dc.subject voice disorder en
dc.subject phenotype en
dc.subject L-dopa. en
dc.title Defining Speech Subtypes in De Novo Parkinson Disease: Response to Long-term Levodopa Therapy
dc.type journal article en
dc.type.status Peer-reviewed
dc.type.version publishedVersion
dspace.entity.type Publication
relation.isAuthorOfPublication cd107ee8-c377-42a1-a8a1-5c3d15537d72
relation.isAuthorOfPublication 2d60b12f-135b-4cd4-b24b-b1bfe30c382e
relation.isAuthorOfPublication 8d9f9a59-d6a4-43ff-84bd-14e8b1bd19b2
relation.isAuthorOfPublication.latestForDiscovery cd107ee8-c377-42a1-a8a1-5c3d15537d72

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