Literature DB >> 7792003

Impaired movement sequencing in patients with Huntington's disease: a kinematic analysis.

J G Phillips1, E Chiu, J L Bradshaw, R Iansek.   

Abstract

This experiment asked whether Huntington's disease, like Parkinson's disease, another disorder of the basal ganglia, causes a specific progressive deficit in the performance of sequential movement. Ten patients with Huntington's disease and their age-matched controls wrote the lower-case letter "l" four times in a linked cursive script, upon a graphics tablet which sampled pen position at 200 Hz. Kinematic features of sequential movement (stroke length, stroke duration, peak velocity, time to peak velocity and time from peak to zero velocity) were examined in a Group by Stroke Position (2 x 8) design, to identify which aspects of movement might show progressive disturbances. Unlike Agostino et al. [Brain 115, 1481-1495, 1992], this experiment did in fact find progressive changes in the performance of sequential movements. Kinematic analysis indicated a progressive increase in movement duration during sequential movement, that was associated with the accelerative phase of movement.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1995        PMID: 7792003     DOI: 10.1016/0028-3932(94)00114-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropsychologia        ISSN: 0028-3932            Impact factor:   3.139


  7 in total

1.  Neural modeling and imaging of the cortical interactions underlying syllable production.

Authors:  Frank H Guenther; Satrajit S Ghosh; Jason A Tourville
Journal:  Brain Lang       Date:  2005-07-22       Impact factor: 2.381

2.  Kinematic analysis of handwriting movements in patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder.

Authors:  P Mavrogiorgou; R Mergl; P Tigges; J El Husseini; A Schröter; G Juckel; M Zaudig; U Hegerl
Journal:  J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry       Date:  2001-05       Impact factor: 10.154

Review 3.  Differential diagnosis of the major progressive dementias and depression in middle and late adulthood: a summary of the literature of the early 1990s.

Authors:  L D Rosenstein
Journal:  Neuropsychol Rev       Date:  1998-09       Impact factor: 7.444

4.  Handwriting Movement Abnormalities in Symptomatic and Premanifest Huntington's Disease.

Authors:  Michael Caligiuri; Chase Snell; Sungmee Park; Jody Corey-Bloom
Journal:  Mov Disord Clin Pract       Date:  2019-08-16

5.  Start/stop signals emerge in nigrostriatal circuits during sequence learning.

Authors:  Xin Jin; Rui M Costa
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2010-07-22       Impact factor: 49.962

6.  Chunking as the result of an efficiency computation trade-off.

Authors:  Pavan Ramkumar; Daniel E Acuna; Max Berniker; Scott T Grafton; Robert S Turner; Konrad P Kording
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2016-07-11       Impact factor: 14.919

7.  Basal ganglia subcircuits distinctively encode the parsing and concatenation of action sequences.

Authors:  Xin Jin; Fatuel Tecuapetla; Rui M Costa
Journal:  Nat Neurosci       Date:  2014-01-26       Impact factor: 24.884

  7 in total

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