@misc{Wasielewska_Anna_The_2016, author={Wasielewska, Anna}, address={Kraków}, howpublished={online}, year={2016}, school={Wydział Lekarski}, language={pol}, abstract={Background: Parkinson’s Disease (PD) is the most frequent degenerative brain disease, where non motor symptoms are sensory disorder and pain estimated to 68-83%.Aim: Assess intensity, location, characteristics and types of chronic pain in PD. Impact of assessing pain on functional activity, quality of life and dependance on anxiety, depressive disorder and evaluation of somatosensory evoked potentials (SEP). Methods: 101 PD with pain compared with 53 PD without pain. They were assessed by Schwab-England scale, Hoehn and Yahr, UPDRS. The pain was assessed by VAS, MPQ-SF, BPI, LANSS. Everyone was assessed by SEP. Emotional status was assessed by Beck test, HADS, the Hamilton. The quality of life assessed by PDQ 8.Results: The average pain intensity was moderate and assessed in MPQ-SF, VAS, BPI. 12 PD reported neuropathic pain by LANSS but muscular, joint’s persistent and fatiguing pain was general. PDQ 8 index was 38 points. There was mild anxiety in HADS-A and moderate, strong depressive symptoms in HADS-D, Hamilton and BDI. No statistical relation between groups outside latency of lower extremities waves. Latency prolongation differences of SEP wave: N21- musculoskeletal pain, P37- central, P31- neuropathic. No significant relation between latency of SEP waves with pain intensity.Conclusion: Muscular pain is the most frequent kind of pain in PD. Anxiety intensity and depression}, abstract={are not consistent with pain intensity. Pain reduces their quality of life.The occurrence of pain is not linked to prolongation of waves in SEP. No signifiant relationship between latency of SEP waves, pain intensity or parkinsonism progression.}, title={The chronic pain syndromes in Parkinson’s disease}, type={Praca doktorska}, keywords={somatosensory evoked potentials, depression, Parkinson’s disease, chronic pain}, }