| Literature DB >> 22191075 |
K B Foreman1, C Wisted, O Addison, R L Marcus, P C Lastayo, L E Dibble.
Abstract
Introduction. Dopamine-replacement medications may improve mobility while not improving responses to postural challenges and could therefore increase fall risk. The purpose of this study was to measure reactive postural responses and gait-related mobility of patients with PD during ON and OFF medication conditions. Methods. Reactive postural responses to the Pull Test and performance of the Functional Gait Assessment (FGA) were recorded from 15 persons with PD during ON and OFF medication conditions. Results. Persons with PD demonstrated no significant difference in the reactive postural responses between medication conditions but demonstrated significantly better performance on the FGA when ON medications compared to OFF. Discussion/Conclusion. Dopamine-replacement medications alone may improve gait-related mobility without improvements in reactive postural responses and therefore could result in iatrogenic increases in fall risk. Rehabilitation providers should be aware of the side effects and limitations of medication treatment and implement interventions to improve postural responses.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22191075 PMCID: PMC3236434 DOI: 10.1155/2012/692150
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parkinsons Dis ISSN: 2042-0080
Results of PD group ON and OFF medication (Mean ± SD).
| Step reaction time (sec) | Step length (cm) | Step avg velocity (cm/sec) | COM displacement (cm) | COM avg velocity (cm/sec) | Pull Test (UPDRS motor subsection item 30) | FGA | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ON meds 95% CI | 0.77 ± 0.39 | 25.94 ± 10.33 | 62.45 ± 17.11 | 19.05 ± 6.91 | 19.42 ± 6.59 | 0.73 ± 0.46 | 23.67 ± 4.59* |
| 0.56–0.99 | 20.22–31.67 | 52.98–71.93 | 15.23–22.88 | 15.77–23.07 | 0.48–0.99 | 21.12–26.21 | |
| OFF meds 95% CI | 0.75 ± 0.39 | 25.72 ± 11.61 | 63.38 ± 24.05 | 19.66 ± 7.46 | 20.20 ± 7.01 | 1.0 ± 0.53 | 18.80 ± 4.80 |
| 0.53–0.97 | 19.29–32.15 | 50.07–76.70 | 15.53–23.80 | 16.32–24.09 | 0.70–1.30 | 16.14–21.46 | |
| Effect size | 0.06 | 0.02 | .05 | 0.09 | 0.12 | 0.56 | 1.07 |
*P ≤ 0.008.
Figure 1Visual representation of marker data during ON (a) and OFF (b) medication testing trials. White lines depict the equality of step length (Mean (SD): (a) 25.94 (10.33), (b) 25.72 (11.61)).
Figure 2Postural response variables.
Figure 3Clinical balance test results. *P ≤ 0.008.
FGA item analysis: items were determined to be dopamine responsive if 3 criteria were met: (1) there was statistical significance between medication conditions, (P < 0.005) (2) there was a large effect size (ES > 0.70), and (3) the majority of individuals tested demonstrated a performance improvement with dopamine replacement.
| FGA Item | Between-medication condition significance level | Between-medication condition effect size | Number with positive dopamine-replacement effect | Dopamine-responsive (Yes/No) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) Gait on a level surface |
| 1.07 | 9/15 | Yes |
| (2) Change in gait speed |
| 1.03 | 8/15 | Yes |
| (3) Gait with horizontal head turns |
| 0.63 | 5/15 | No |
| (4) Gait with sustained vertical head positions |
| 0.85 | 7/15 | No |
| (5) Gait and pivot turn |
| 0.65 | 7/15 | No |
| (6) Step over obstacle |
| 0.31 | 2/15 | No |
| (7) Gait with narrow base of support |
| 0.90 | 9/15 | Yes |
| (8) Gait with eyes closed |
| 0.47 | 5/15 | No |
| (9) Ambulating backwards |
| 0.75 | 7/15 | No |
| (10) Steps |
| 0.32 | 2/15 | No |