| Literature DB >> 35815091 |
Eric Chun-Pu Chu1, Alan Te-Chang Chen1, Ricky Chiang2.
Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a progressive neurological disease characterized by muscle stiffness, tremor, slowness of movement, and difficulties with posture and walking. Muscle and joint pain are frequent non-motor symptoms of PD. Pain associated with PD is mainly caused by a combination of truncal dystonia, stooped posture, and muscle rigidity. However, PD deformities were rarely discussed in the literature. A 68-year-old Asian female with PD treated with Levodopa for six years complained of progressive neck pain, contractures, and subluxation of both hands in the last two years. A positron emission tomography (PET) scan revealed decreased rostrocaudal gradient uptake in both posterior putamen. After 9 months of multimodal chiropractic rehabilitation, the patient had significant improvement in symptoms, including pain resolution as per the numeric rating scale and physical and mental improvement as per the PD questionnaire. Radiographic measurement showed significantly improved postural alignment and stability. Measurement of joint motion and angles showed an improvement in hand deformity. Although PD is a neurodegenerative disease that is not curable, multimodal rehabilitation may improve neurological and musculoskeletal functions by inducing proprioceptive balance, motor strength, and joint movement. The current study may illustrate multimodal rehabilitation addressing orthopedic deformity associated with symptoms in a PD patient.Entities:
Keywords: COG – Center of gravity; MCP – metacarpophalangeal; MRI – Magnetic resonance image; PD – Parkinson's Disease; PDQ – PD Questionnaire; PET – Positron emission tomography; PIP – Proximal interphalangeal; Parkinson's; SH – striatal hand.; TrMS – Transcranial magnetic stimulation; chiropractic therapy; striatal deformity
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35815091 PMCID: PMC9262267 DOI: 10.25122/jml-2021-0418
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Life ISSN: 1844-122X
Figure 1Stage 4 striatal left-hand deformity in a patient with PD for 6 years. Severe bone scintigraphy showed her left metacarpal phalangeal (MCP) at 100° hyperextension, proximal interphalangeal (PIP) at 30° hyperextension, and swan neck deformity of fingers.
Figure 2Postural parameters assessed on a sagittal standing full-spine EOS® x-rays: Initial radiograph identified a forward head, stooped posture, and reduced cervical lordosis. The center of gravity (COG) of the head was shifted anteriorly.
Figure 3A repeat photograph 9 months later showing substantial improvement in most of the orthopedic parameters. Her left MCP deformity had improved to 30° extension, PIP at 10° extension, and swan neck deformity of fingers remained the same.
Figure 4A repeat radiograph taken nine months later demonstrates significant improvement in the majority of the spinal deformity. The C7 plumb line (red line) is drawn caudally from the C7 vertebra's center. The line should be parallel to or within 5 mm of S1's superior-posterior endplate. In a well-aligned subject, the line of COG (yellow line) has improved in the sagittal plane.