| Responses
to Dynamic Head-and-Body Tilts are Enhanced in Parkinson's Disease
Nicole Paquet and Christina WY Hui-Chan
Abstract:
Background: Previous studies demonstrated
that destabilizing responses to slow perturbations were
enhanced in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). Our objectives
were to investigate the influence of PD on responses to faster
whole head-and-body tilts in the standing position, and to establish
whether any modification of tilt-evoked responses in PD patients
was related to possible changes in the modulation of soleus
(SO) H-reflex. Methods: Ten PD patients and 10
age-matched normal subjects assumed a standing position on an
L-shaped tilting apparatus. Their head and shoulders were firmly
attached to the back support of the apparatus, while their feet
were fixated to the standing platform. With their vision occluded,
the subject's whole head-and-body was suddenly tilted forward
to 20°, at a peak head acceleration of 0.7g ± 0.1g.
Tilt-evoked responses were recorded from the lower limb muscles
bilaterally. In addition, 40 H-reflexes were elicited in the
SO muscle at 30-190 ms intervals after the onset of head acceleration.
The M response amplitude was kept within ±15% of its control
value. Results: PD patients demonstrated an abnormally
high responsiveness to whole head-and-body tilts in comparison
with age-matched normal subjects. This was shown by the significantly
larger proportion of PD patients manifesting responses in the
SO, biceps femoris and vastus lateralis muscles (p<0.05),
as well as their significantly larger SO response area (413%;
p<0.01). In contrast, the amplitude of the SO H-reflex was
significantly increased by only 14% (p<0.05) in these patients,
and only at 30-70 ms after head acceleration onset. Conclusions:
The overexcitable tilt-evoked responses of PD patients could
originate from a reduced ability to suppress responses when
the body is supported. This enhanced excitability of tilt-evoked
responses was probably not due to motoneuronal hyperexcitability
or decreased presynaptic inhibition of the group Ia terminals
involved in the mainly monosynaptic H-reflex pathway. Thus,
we hypothesize that the control of spinal interneurons
involved in the tilt-evoked responses may be defective in PD.
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Can.
J. Neurol. Sci. 1997; 24: 44-52
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