| Literature DB >> 35647517 |
Sujitha Mahendran1,2, Oliver Bichsel2,3,4, Roger Gassert4, Christian R Baumann1,2, Lukas L Imbach5, Daniel Waldvogel1,2.
Abstract
Background: Tremor is one of the most common movement disorders but the correct diagnosis of tremor disorders, especially the differentiation between Parkinson's disease tremor (PT) and essential tremor (ET) remains a challenge for clinicians. Method: We examined a novel hand position to distinguish PT from ET. We prospectively collected accelerometric tremor data in 14 ET patients and 14 PT patients with arms and hands fully stretched against arms stretched and hands relaxed, i. e. hanging down. The total acceleration from the three pairwise-perpendicular accelerometric axes during the 1-minute blocks of the two hand positions were computed and high-passed filtered at 2 Hz. The power spectral density during each hand position was calculated and summed up over the frequency domain.Entities:
Keywords: Accelerometry; Essential tremor; Hand postures; Parkinson's disease; Tremor
Year: 2022 PMID: 35647517 PMCID: PMC9136132 DOI: 10.1016/j.prdoa.2022.100146
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Park Relat Disord ISSN: 2590-1125
Demographics and clinical patient characteristics of the PD patient cohort. The percentage in the ON/OFF column represents the improvement with respect to OFF. Patients who display an approximately equal degree of akinetic/rigid type and tremor-dominant type are listed as equivalent.
| 1 | 71 | M | tremor | 2 | 24/37 (35 %) |
| 2 | 75 | F | tremor | 15 | 62/85 (27 %) |
| 3 | 70 | M | tremor | 2 | 10/23 (57 %) |
| 4 | 66 | F | tremor | 5 | 12/29 (59 %) |
| 5 | 44 | M | tremor | 5 | 8/33 (76 %) |
| 6 | 41 | M | tremor | 4 | 17/24 (29 %) |
| 7 | 76 | M | tremor | 12 | 32/49 (35 %) |
| 8 | 55 | M | tremor | 2 | 28/43 (35 %) |
| 9 | 60 | F | equivalent | 8 | 11/50 (78 %) |
| 10 | 81 | F | tremor | 2 | 29/38 (24 %) |
| 11 | 69 | F | equivalent | 8 | 46/51 (10 %) |
| 12 | 62 | F | equivalent | 1 | 13/28 (54 %) |
| 13 | 80 | F | tremor | 1 | 40/55 (27 %) |
| 14 | 68 | M | tremor | 7 | 22/50 (56 %) |
Demographics and clinical patient characteristics of the ET patient cohort.
| 1 | 75 | F | 1 | 11/24 |
| 2 | 51 | F | 2 | 0/2 |
| 3 | 63 | M | 4 | n.a./n.a. |
| 4 | 75 | F | 4 | 8/25 |
| 5 | 63 | F | 1 | 4/10 |
| 6 | 52 | M | 1 | n.a./7 |
| 7 | 81 | M | 20 | 13/15 |
| 8 | 80 | M | n.a. | n.a./n.a. |
| 9 | 69 | F | 5 | n.a./27 |
| 10 | 71 | F | 11 | n.a./28 |
| 11 | 62 | F | 30 | n.a./10 |
| 12 | 77 | F | 2 | n.a./13 |
| 13 | 67 | M | 2 | 13/23 |
| 14 | 46 | F | 21 | 7/16 |
Fig. 1Hands hanging down position (HD).
Fig. 2Hands completely stretched (CS).
Fig. 3IMU total accelerometry spectrogram during the clinical tremor evaluation of a representative patient in our cohort. Transitions between 1-min blocks are seen as discrete power increases at certain time points (e. g. at 1 min, 2 min etc.). Here, the focus was on the ‘hands completely stretched (CS) and the ‘hands hanging down’ (HD). A main tremor frequency between ∼ 5–8 Hz can already be visually appreciated in the spectrogram, as well as harmonics between t = 3–4 min and t = 5–6. During the last minute, the patient was performing a target-to-nose test.
Fig. 4Comparing total tremor spectral power (mean: red horizontal line; 95 % confidence interval: red patched area; standard deviation: blue vertical line) during the ‘hands hanging down’ (HD) and ‘hands completely stretched’ (CS) positions in patients with Parkinson disease (PD, n = 12) and patients with essential tremor (ET, n = 12). Data from the same patient were connected by a line. Tremor increased significantly in patients with PD when transitioning from the CS to the HD hands position (Wilcoxon signed rank test, p = 0.0068). In contrast, tremor decreased in 75 % of ET patients during the transition from CS to the HD hands position. Moreover, tremor was significantly higher in PD as compared to ET during the HD hands position (Wilcoxon rank sum test, p = 0.0262). (For interpretation of the references to colour in this figure legend, the reader is referred to the web version of this article.)
Fig. 5Change in the total spectral power for the transition between the ‘hands completely stretched’ (CS) to the ‘hands hanging down’ (HD) positions for patients with Parkinson disease (PD, orange lines) vs. patients with essential tremor (ET, blue lines). 77 % of patients that showed an increase in tremor from the CS to HD hands position had PD. 82 % of patients that showed a decrease in tremor from the CS to the HD hands position had ET. (For interpretation of the references to colour in this figure legend, the reader is referred to the web version of this article.)