Postural reactions to neck vibration in Parkinson's disease
Identifieur interne : 001C88 ( PascalFrancis/Corpus ); précédent : 001C87; suivant : 001C89Postural reactions to neck vibration in Parkinson's disease
Auteurs : Peter Valkovic ; Siegbert Krafczyk ; Marian Saling ; Jan Benetin ; Kai BotzelSource :
- Movement disorders [ 0885-3185 ] ; 2006.
Descripteurs français
- Pascal (Inist)
English descriptors
- KwdEn :
Abstract
To test the hypothesis that reduced reactions to proprioceptive input signals contribute to postural instability in Parkinson's disease (PD), pulses of mechanical vibration were applied to the neck muscles of PD patients and healthy controls. This stimulus elicits postural reactions in standing subjects. Participating were 13 moderately affected PD patients, 13 severely affected PD patients, and 13 age-matched healthy subjects. Patients were tested on and off medication. Three-second-long pulses of vibration were regularly (10 times) applied to the posterior neck muscles while subjects kept their eyes open or closed. Postural responses to the stimuli were measured by static posturography. No intergroup difference in the pattern and latencies of responses was found. However, the amplitudes of the postural reactions (shift of center of foot pressure) were significantly larger in advanced PD patients; those of moderately affected PD patients did not differ from those of control subjects. Moreover, the size of postural responses in both latter groups decreased across the trial contrary to that of advanced PD patients. Comparison of the measures during on and off testing revealed no significant differences. These results indicate that neither afferent proprioceptive deficits nor central integrative functions but rather scaling and habituation of erroneous proprioceptive information are disturbed in the postural control of advanced PD. Nondopaminergic structures seem to be responsible for this impairment.
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Pour connaître la documentation sur le format Inist Standard.
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Format Inist (serveur)
NO : | PASCAL 06-0135494 INIST |
---|---|
ET : | Postural reactions to neck vibration in Parkinson's disease |
AU : | VALKOVIC (Peter); KRAFCZYK (Siegbert); SALING (Marian); BENETIN (Jan); BOTZEL (Kai) |
AF : | Department of Neurology, Ludwig-Maximilians University/Munich/Allemagne (1 aut., 2 aut., 5 aut.); Second Department of Neurology, School of Medicine, Comenius University/Bratislava/Slovaquie (1 aut., 3 aut., 4 aut.) |
DT : | Publication en série; Niveau analytique |
SO : | Movement disorders; ISSN 0885-3185; Etats-Unis; Da. 2006; Vol. 21; No. 1; Pp. 59-65; Bibl. 37 ref. |
LA : | Anglais |
EA : | To test the hypothesis that reduced reactions to proprioceptive input signals contribute to postural instability in Parkinson's disease (PD), pulses of mechanical vibration were applied to the neck muscles of PD patients and healthy controls. This stimulus elicits postural reactions in standing subjects. Participating were 13 moderately affected PD patients, 13 severely affected PD patients, and 13 age-matched healthy subjects. Patients were tested on and off medication. Three-second-long pulses of vibration were regularly (10 times) applied to the posterior neck muscles while subjects kept their eyes open or closed. Postural responses to the stimuli were measured by static posturography. No intergroup difference in the pattern and latencies of responses was found. However, the amplitudes of the postural reactions (shift of center of foot pressure) were significantly larger in advanced PD patients; those of moderately affected PD patients did not differ from those of control subjects. Moreover, the size of postural responses in both latter groups decreased across the trial contrary to that of advanced PD patients. Comparison of the measures during on and off testing revealed no significant differences. These results indicate that neither afferent proprioceptive deficits nor central integrative functions but rather scaling and habituation of erroneous proprioceptive information are disturbed in the postural control of advanced PD. Nondopaminergic structures seem to be responsible for this impairment. |
CC : | 002B17; 002B17G; 002B17A03 |
FD : | Système nerveux pathologie; Vibration maladie; Parkinson maladie; Cou; Posture; Instabilité; Proprioception |
FG : | Encéphale pathologie; Extrapyramidal syndrome; Maladie dégénérative; Système nerveux central pathologie |
ED : | Nervous system diseases; Vibration disease; Parkinson disease; Neck; Posture; Instability; Proprioception |
EG : | Cerebral disorder; Extrapyramidal syndrome; Degenerative disease; Central nervous system disease |
SD : | Sistema nervioso patología; Vibración enfermedad; Parkinson enfermedad; Cuello; Postura; Inestabilidad; Propiocepción |
LO : | INIST-20953.354000133169150080 |
ID : | 06-0135494 |
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Pascal:06-0135494Le document en format XML
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<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">To test the hypothesis that reduced reactions to proprioceptive input signals contribute to postural instability in Parkinson's disease (PD), pulses of mechanical vibration were applied to the neck muscles of PD patients and healthy controls. This stimulus elicits postural reactions in standing subjects. Participating were 13 moderately affected PD patients, 13 severely affected PD patients, and 13 age-matched healthy subjects. Patients were tested on and off medication. Three-second-long pulses of vibration were regularly (10 times) applied to the posterior neck muscles while subjects kept their eyes open or closed. Postural responses to the stimuli were measured by static posturography. No intergroup difference in the pattern and latencies of responses was found. However, the amplitudes of the postural reactions (shift of center of foot pressure) were significantly larger in advanced PD patients; those of moderately affected PD patients did not differ from those of control subjects. Moreover, the size of postural responses in both latter groups decreased across the trial contrary to that of advanced PD patients. Comparison of the measures during on and off testing revealed no significant differences. These results indicate that neither afferent proprioceptive deficits nor central integrative functions but rather scaling and habituation of erroneous proprioceptive information are disturbed in the postural control of advanced PD. Nondopaminergic structures seem to be responsible for this impairment.</div>
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<ET>Postural reactions to neck vibration in Parkinson's disease</ET>
<AU>VALKOVIC (Peter); KRAFCZYK (Siegbert); SALING (Marian); BENETIN (Jan); BOTZEL (Kai)</AU>
<AF>Department of Neurology, Ludwig-Maximilians University/Munich/Allemagne (1 aut., 2 aut., 5 aut.); Second Department of Neurology, School of Medicine, Comenius University/Bratislava/Slovaquie (1 aut., 3 aut., 4 aut.)</AF>
<DT>Publication en série; Niveau analytique</DT>
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<LA>Anglais</LA>
<EA>To test the hypothesis that reduced reactions to proprioceptive input signals contribute to postural instability in Parkinson's disease (PD), pulses of mechanical vibration were applied to the neck muscles of PD patients and healthy controls. This stimulus elicits postural reactions in standing subjects. Participating were 13 moderately affected PD patients, 13 severely affected PD patients, and 13 age-matched healthy subjects. Patients were tested on and off medication. Three-second-long pulses of vibration were regularly (10 times) applied to the posterior neck muscles while subjects kept their eyes open or closed. Postural responses to the stimuli were measured by static posturography. No intergroup difference in the pattern and latencies of responses was found. However, the amplitudes of the postural reactions (shift of center of foot pressure) were significantly larger in advanced PD patients; those of moderately affected PD patients did not differ from those of control subjects. Moreover, the size of postural responses in both latter groups decreased across the trial contrary to that of advanced PD patients. Comparison of the measures during on and off testing revealed no significant differences. These results indicate that neither afferent proprioceptive deficits nor central integrative functions but rather scaling and habituation of erroneous proprioceptive information are disturbed in the postural control of advanced PD. Nondopaminergic structures seem to be responsible for this impairment.</EA>
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