## Abstract We investigated predominance of visual control in Parkinson's disease (PD) gait regulation and whether visual kinesthesia has systematic effects on gait parameters. Effects of artificial optic flow were studied on walking velocity (WV), stride length (SL), and stride frequency (SF) duri
A defect of kinesthesia in Parkinson's disease
โ Scribed by Dr. Thomas Klockgether; Maike Borutta; Herbert Rapp; Sybille Spieker; Johannes Dichgans
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 568 KB
- Volume
- 10
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-3185
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โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
Patients suffering from Parkinson's disease (PD) are more dependent on visual feedback during movement than are normals. Studying twoโdimensional pointing movements, we recently found that PD patients undershoot targets when vision of their own moving hand is occluded but not when complete vision is provided or when the target is extinguished immediately before movement onset. In the absence of vision, information about position of the moving hand may originate from peripheral kinesthetic feedback and from corollary discharges derved from the efferent motor signal. To find out which of both mechanismsโkinesthetic feedback or corollary dischargeโis defective in PD, we compared active movements with imposed movements in which the hand is passively moved by the experimenter, whereas vision of the hand was occluded under either condition. In agreement with our earlier findings, slow, active pointing movements of PD patients were hypometric. In addition, PD patients terminated passively imposed movements of comparable speed earlier than did normals, with the consequence that imposed movements were equally hypometric. Our results make it unlikely that disturbed corollary discharge is responsible for hypometria under nonvisual conditions. Instead, the data suggest that PD patients have a defect of kinesthesia in slowly executed movements.
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## Abstract Visual symptoms are common in PD and PD dementia and include difficulty reading, double vision, illusions, feelings of presence and passage, and complex visual hallucinations. Despite the established prognostic implications of complex visual hallucinations, the interaction between cogni