| Literature DB >> 28382420 |
Arno M Janssen1,2, Moniek A M Munneke3, Jorik Nonnekes4, Thomas van der Kraan3, Alice Nieuwboer5, Ivan Toni6, Anke H Snijders3,7, Bastiaan R Bloem3, Dick F Stegeman3.
Abstract
Freezing of gait (FOG) in Parkinson's disease (PD) likely results from dysfunction within a complex neural gait circuitry involving multiple brain regions. Herein, cerebellar activity is increased in patients compared to healthy subjects. This cerebellar involvement has been proposed to be compensatory. We hypothesized that patients with FOG would have a reduced ability to recruit the cerebellum to compensate for dysfunction in other brain areas. In this study cerebellar activity was modified unilaterally by either excitatory or inhibitory theta burst stimulation (TBS), applied during two separate sessions. The ipsilateral cerebellar hemisphere, corresponding to the body side most affected by PD, was stimulated. Seventeen patients with PD showing 'off' state FOG participated. The presence of FOG was verified objectively upon inclusion. We monitored gait and bimanual rhythmic upper limb movements before and directly after TBS. Gait was evaluated with a FOG-provoking protocol, including rapid 360° turns and a 10-m walking test with small fast steps. Upper limb movement performance was evaluated with a repetitive finger flexion-extension task. TBS did not affect the amount of freezing during walking or finger tapping. However, TBS did increase gait speed when walking with small steps, and decreased gait speed when walking as fast as possible with a normal step size. The changes in gait speed were not accompanied by changes in corticospinal excitability of M1. Unilateral cerebellar TBS did not improve FOG. However, changes in gait speed were found which suggests a role of the cerebellum in PD.Entities:
Keywords: Cerebellum; Freezing of gait; Freezing of upper limbs; Parkinson’s disease; Theta burst stimulation
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28382420 PMCID: PMC5413528 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-017-8479-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 4.849
Clinical and demographic characteristics of 17 Parkinson’s disease patients
| Parameter | Mean | Range |
|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 61.2 | 46–76 |
| Parkinson’s disease duration (years) | 8.5 | 1–25 |
| FOG duration (years) | 3.4 | 1–12 |
| Hoehn and Yahr stage | 2–3 | |
| MDS-UPDRS part 3 | 33.4 | 12–68 |
| NFOGQ | 16.5 | 3–28 |
| FAB | 16.0 | 12–18 |
| MMSE | 28.5 | 24–30 |
| Resting motor threshold (%MSO) | 43 | 34–60 |
For MDS-UPDRS, N-FOGQ and Hoenh and Yahr stage, higher scores indicate worse functioning. For both FAB and MMSE, lower scores indicate worse functioning. The scores were evaluated ‘off’ medication
MDS-UPDRS Movement Disorder Society—unified Parkinson’s disease rating scale part 3 (score 0–132), N-FOGQ new freezing of gait questionnaire (score 0–28), Hoenh and Yahr stage (score 0–5), MMSE mini mental examination (score 0–30), FAB Frontal Assessment Battery (score 0–18)
Fig. 1Protocol-design for a session. All post-TBS measurements were performed in 30–60 min, depending on the patients’ performance. The added timeline is a rough indication (in minutes, and the moment directly after the TBS set to 0). Not included are N-FOGQ, MMSE, FAB and MDS-UPDRS part 3, for which the scores were determined prior to this protocol in session one
Statistics gait task and upper limb task
| Time | Stimulation | Task | Stimulation × time | Stimulation × task | Time × task | Stimulation × time × task | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FOG duration [combined] | [0.867; n.s.] | [0.874; n.s.] | [0.865; n.s.] | [1.032; 0.326] | [0.971; n.s.] | [0.735; n.s.] | [0.152; n.s.] |
| FOG duration [separate] | [0.840; n.s.] | [0.901; n.s.] | [1.078; 0.379] | [0.974; n.s.] | [1.074; 0.382] | [1.180; 0.326] | [0.997; n.s.] |
| Mean execution time [separate] | [4.005; 0.062] | [1.142; 0.301] |
| [1.903; 0.186] | [1.045; 0.398] |
| [0.826; n.s.] |
| FOUL duration [most] | [3.218; 0.073] | [3.287; 0.070] |
| [0.671; n.s.] | [0.442; n.s.] | [0.565; n.s] | [0.017; n.s.] |
| FOUL duration [least] | [0.348; n.s.] | [3.801; 0.052] |
| [0.697; n.s.] | [1.162; 0.323] | [0.860; n.s.] | [0.657; n.s.] |
| Amplitude [most] | [0.009; n.s.] | [1.760; 0.185] |
| [0.942; n.s.] | [0.302; n.s.] | [0.699; n.s.] | [0.250; n.s.] |
| Amplitude [least] | [0.661; n.s.] | [1.271; 0.260] |
| [0.139; n.s.] | [0.354; n.s.] | [0.437; n.s.] | [0.005; n.s.] |
| Frequency [most] | [1.772; 0.184] | [2.472; 0.116] |
| [2.746; 0.098] | [0.033; n.s.] | [0.285; n.s.] | [0.191; n.s.] |
| Frequency [least] | [0.709; n.s.] | [0.052; n.s.] |
| [0.591; n.s.] | [0.139; n.s.] | [0.381; n.s.] | [0.043; n.s.] |
The factors are ‘time’ (pre or post), ‘stimulation’ (cTBS or iTBS) and task. For gait the task includes (normal, fast, small steps, small fast steps, turning clockwise or turning counterclockwise) and for upper limb (NANS, NAFS, SANS or SAFS). Factor task and interactions with factor task in separate FOG duration and mean execution time = [F 5,16; p]. All other factors and interactions in FOG and mean execution time = [F 1,16; p]. FOG duration was analysed for all gait tasks [separately, 6 task conditions] and for turns and gait trajectory [combined, 2 task conditions] combined. Factor task and interactions with factor task for FOUL duration, amplitude and frequency = [F 3,14; p]. All other factors and interactions for FOUL duration, amplitude and frequency = [F 1,14; p]. Significant results are indicated in bold
Fig. 2The mean freezing (FOG) duration during turning, before and after stimulation, for the a excitatory iTBS and b inhibitory cTBS in seconds. The error bars signify the SEM
Fig. 3The mean task execution times for the gait protocol (only shown for significant differences) before and after stimulation for the a small steps and b fast walking normal step size condition in seconds. The error bars signify the SEM. The asterisks indicate a significant difference between pre- and post-measurements
Fig. 4The mean task execution times for the gait protocol before (pre) and after (post) stimulation for the a cTBS and b iTBS stimulation condition in seconds. The error bars signify the SEM. (pre/post-1 = clockwise turning, pre/post-2 = counter-clockwise turning, pre/post-3 = self-selected speed and normal step size, pre/post-4 = fast walking with normal step size, pre/post-5 = self-selected speed and small step size, pre/post-6 = fast walking with small step size)