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Kinematics
of Initiating a Two-Joint Arm Movement in Patients with Cerebellar
Ataxia
Steve Massaquoi and Mark Hallett
Abstract:
Objective: To characterize kinematically
any systematic aberration in multi-joint movements in cerebellar
ataxia. Methods: Nine patients with cerebellar
degeneration and nine normal subjects, mobile only at the shoulder
and elbow of the right arm, were required to produce left-to-right
cross-body linear hand trajectories on the horizontal surface
of a digitizing tablet. Nonlinearity indicated failure of precise
coordination of the two joints. A wide range of hand speeds
was studied. Data analysis was restricted primarily to the first
130 ms of movement. Results: As hand velocities
increased, normal subjects and, especially, patients produced
misdirected, curved paths. Normal subjects had significant curvature
when peak speeds exceeded 100 cm/s and a trend toward significant
bi-directional angular deviation at velocities greater than
300 cm/s. In patients, peak path curvature was significantly
greater than normal at peak velocities of 50 to 200 cm/s. By
3.3 cm, their paths deviated significantly outward at all but
the slowest speeds. Overall, patients' maximal hand velocities
and shoulder angular velocities, as well as maximal angular
accelerations at both joints, were significantly lower than
normal. Conclusions: The patients' trajectory
aberrations were attributed to a deficient rate of rotation
at the shoulder relative to that at the elbow. Relative to task
requirements, their rate of torque development was apparently
deficient at both joints, but to a greater degree at the shoulder.
Joint torque-rate impairment may contribute to the ataxia in
both multi- and single-joint movements of patients with cerebellar
disorders. A similar, but smaller impairment may produce milder
nonlinearity in high-velocity movements of normal subjects.
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Can.
J. Neurol. Sci. 1996; 23: 3-14
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