M. Kusumi et al., EPIDEMIOLOGY OF PARKINSONS-DISEASE IN YONAGO-CITY, JAPAN - COMPARISONWITH A STUDY CARRIED OUT 12 YEARS AGO, Neuroepidemiology, 15(4), 1996, pp. 201-207
A study of the prevalence of Parkinson's disease (PD) was conducted in
a Japanese city in 1992, and the data compared with those of a simila
r study performed in 1980. On the prevalence day, April 1, 1992, a tot
al of 156 patients (46 males and 110 females) were found to be living
in the investigated area, which had a population of 132,315. The preva
lence per 100,000 population was 117.9 (72.8 in males and 159.1 in fem
ales), and the incidence during the period 1989 through 1992 was 15.0
per 100,000 population per year. The age- and sex-adjusted prevalence
per 100,000 population was 99.5 in 1992 and 103.9 in 1980, as calculat
ed using the 1990 Japanese population as the standard. The age-adjuste
d prevalence in the population under 60 years of age and the incidence
in those under 55 years of age in 1992 were lower than in those under
55 in 1980. These results revealed that changes in the age structure
of the population were the main contributors to the increased incidenc
e of PD.