The interaction of postural and voluntary strategies for stability in Parkinson's disease


Autoria(s): Lima-Pardini, Andrea C. de; Papegaaij, Selma; Cohen, Rajal G.; Teixeira, Luis Augusto; Smith, Beth A.; Horak, Fay B.
Contribuinte(s)

UNIVERSIDADE DE SÃO PAULO

Data(s)

07/11/2013

07/11/2013

2012

Resumo

de Lima-Pardini AC, Papegaaij S, Cohen RG, Teixeira LA, Smith BA, Horak FB. The interaction of postural and voluntary strategies for stability in Parkinson's disease. J Neurophysiol 108: 1244-1252, 2012. First published June 6, 2012; doi:10.1152/jn.00118.2012.-This study assessed the effects of stability constraints of a voluntary task on postural responses to an external perturbation in subjects with Parkinson's disease (PD) and healthy elderly participants. Eleven PD subjects and twelve control subjects were perturbed with backward surface translations while standing and performing two versions of a voluntary task: holding a tray with a cylinder placed with the flat side down [low constraint (LC)] or with the rolling, round side down [high constraint (HC)]. Participants performed alternating blocks of LC and HC trials. PD participants accomplished the voluntary task as well as control subjects, showing slower tray velocity in the HC condition compared with the LC condition. However, the latency of postural responses was longer in the HC condition only for control subjects. Control subjects presented different patterns of hip-shoulder coordination as a function of task constraint, whereas PD subjects had a relatively invariant pattern. Initiating the experiment with the HC task led to 1) decreased postural stability in PD subjects only and 2) reduced peak hip flexion in control subjects only. These results suggest that PD impairs the capacity to adapt postural responses to constraints imposed by a voluntary task.

National Institute on Aging [R37-AG-006457]

Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development [200321/2010-2]

Identificador

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, BETHESDA, v. 108, p. 1244-1252, SEP 01, 2012

0022-3077

http://www.producao.usp.br/handle/BDPI/43025

10.1152/jn.00118.2012

http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jn.00118.2012

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC

BETHESDA

Relação

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY

Direitos

restrictedAccess

Copyright AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC

Palavras-Chave #POSTURAL CONTROL #POSTURAL SET #INITIAL CONDITION #ATTENTIONAL FOCUS #TASK CONSTRAINT #STEP INITIATION #RESPONSES #SET #BALANCE #MOVEMENTS #LEVODOPA #PERFORMANCE #ADAPTATION #NEUROSCIENCES #PHYSIOLOGY
Tipo

article

original article

publishedVersion