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Pallidotomy in Parkinson's disease improves single‐joint, repetitive, ballistic movements, but fails to modify multijoint, repetitive, gestural movements
Author(s) -
Merello Marcelo,
Balej Jorge,
Leiguarda Ramon
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
movement disorders
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.352
H-Index - 198
eISSN - 1531-8257
pISSN - 0885-3185
DOI - 10.1002/mds.10336
Subject(s) - kinematics , wrist , pallidotomy , elbow , physical medicine and rehabilitation , movement (music) , joint (building) , neuroscience , psychology , parkinson's disease , physics , medicine , anatomy , engineering , acoustics , deep brain stimulation , architectural engineering , disease , classical mechanics , pathology
We studied 12 non‐demented PD patients in on state before and 3 months after posteroventral pallidotomy (PVP), in order to evaluate the effects of surgery upon an unconstrained, multijoint skilled movement as well as a single joint, repetitive, ballistic movement. A Selspot II System was used for three‐dimensional data acquisition, processing and reconstruction of limb trajectories. Specific wrist kinematic features of spatial accuracy (linearity and planarity), temporal attributes (acceleration and velocity), spatiotemporal relationships (velocity‐curvature coupling), and joint kinematic variables (relationships between wrist and elbow velocities and relative arm angle amplitudes) for each cycle of movement were graphically and numerically analysed. QMC was applied to single joint, repetitive, ballistic movements. QMC significantly improved after PVP ( P < 0.0006). However, wrist as well as joint kinematic variables of the gestural movements failed to change significantly after PVP. The lack of improvement of the kinematic abnormalities of the gestural movement in PD patients would indicate that they are unrelated to the basic motor deficit; most likely they are the result of a disruption of a complex of sensorimotor integration processes due to abnormal parieto‐frontal basal ganglia interaction. © 2002 Movement Disorder Society