| Literature DB >> 30193795 |
Caio Ferraz Cruz1, Maria Elisa Pimentel Piemonte2, Líria Akie Okai-Nobrega3, Erika Okamoto4, Ana Claudia de Souza Fortaleza5, Martina Mancini6, Fay Bahling Horak6, José Angelo Barela7.
Abstract
This study examined the coupling between visual information and body sway in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) compared with healthy controls. Postural control performance was compared between 14 patients with PD (age: 69.6 ± 8.8 years - stages 1-3 of the Hoehn and Yahr scale) and 14 healthy control participants (age: 68.6 ± 3.0 years). Participants stood upright in a moving room that remained motionless or continuously oscillated in the anterior-posterior direction. Ten trials were performed in the following conditions: no movement of the room (1 trial) and with the room moving at frequencies of 0.1, 0.17, and 0.5 Hz (3 trials each frequency). Body sway and moving room displacement were recorded. The results indicated that patients with PD displayed larger body sway magnitude in the stationary room condition. Body sway of patients with PD was induced by visual manipulation in all three visual stimulus frequencies, but body sway of patients with PD was less coherent compared to that of the control participants. However, no difference was observed in the visual-body sway coupling structure. These results indicate that patients with PD can unconsciously couple body sway to visual information in order to control postural sway in a similar manner to healthy participants with intact visual-motor coupling for posture control. However, this coupling is marked by greater variability, indicating that people with PD have a motor system with greater inherent noise leading to a more varied behavior.Entities:
Keywords: Parkinson’s disease; Posture; Sensorimotor coupling; Vision
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30193795 PMCID: PMC6314300 DOI: 10.1016/j.neulet.2018.08.050
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurosci Lett ISSN: 0304-3940 Impact factor: 3.046