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Interaction between eye and hand movements in multiple sclerosis patients with intention tremor

✍ Scribed by Peter Feys; Werner F. Helsen; Xuguang Liu; Bart Nuttin; Ann Lavrysen; Stephan P. Swinnen; Pierre Ketelaer


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2005
Tongue
English
Weight
111 KB
Volume
20
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-3185

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Deficient eye and hand movements are present in patients with multiple sclerosis. In the present study, eye and hand movements were simultaneously measured during visually guided wrist step‐tracking tasks in 16 patients with intention tremor and 15 healthy controls. The coupling between eye and hand movements was analyzed during simultaneous eye–hand tracking, and interactions were studied by comparing the coordinated eye–hand condition with isolated eye‐ or hand‐tracking conditions. Despite movement abnormalities, the onset of eye and hand movements was highly correlated and an invariant coupling between the saccadic completion time and hand peak velocity was found, suggesting that the temporal coupling was very much preserved. The differences between the experimental tracking conditions suggest that, in MS patients with intention tremor, the ocular system influenced the hand movements. Intention tremor amplitude was reduced when there was no preceding saccadic eye movement, whereas conversely, eye movements were not affected by different hand tremor severity. © 2005 Movement Disorder Society


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