𝔖 Bobbio Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

Long latency postural reflexes are under supraspinal dopaminergic control

✍ Scribed by Dr. Bastiaan R. Bloem; Dennis J. Beckley; Jeroen P. P. van Vugt; J. Gert van Dijk; Michael P. Remler; J. William Langston; Raymund A. C. Roos


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1995
Tongue
English
Weight
863 KB
Volume
10
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-3185

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Scaling of posturally stabilizing long latency (LL) reflexes in tibialis anterior muscles induced by “toe‐up” rotational perturbations is abnormal in standing patients with Parkinson's disease. To investigate the contribution of dopaminergic pathways to abnormal scaling, we studied LL reflexes in 22 patients with selective hypodopaminergic syndromes: 10 psychiatric patients taking chronic neuroleptic medication (7 with mild parkinsonism), 8 patients with young‐onset Parkinson's disease, and 4 patients with MPTP‐induced parkinsonism. Results were compared with those of 10 healthy controls. Stimuli consisted of (a) 10 serial (predictable) perturbations of 4° amplitude, (b) 10 serial (predictable) perturbations of 10° amplitude, and (c) 20 randomly mixed (unpredictable) perturbations of either 4 or 10° amplitude. In normal subjects, LL reflex amplitudes were adapted to match predictable variations in stimulus size, whereas under unpredictable conditions a “default” response emerged that anticipated the 10° perturbation. LL reflex scaling under predictable conditions was intact in patients with neuroleptic‐induced parkinsonism and young‐onset Parkinson's disease, but the large default LL response under unpredictable conditions was absent. In patients with MPTP‐induced parkinsonism, LL reflex scaling was absent during both predictable and unpredictable conditions. We conclude that abnormal scaling of posturally stabilizing LL reflexes is related to decreased supraspinal dopaminergic influence.