Moving forward with prisms: Sensory-motor adaptation improves gait initiation in Parkinson's disease

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Abstract

It is postulated that the decreased walking speed; small, shuffling steps; and "freezing" shown by patients with Parkinson's disease could stem from an inability to tilt the body forward enough to provide sufficient forward propulsion. In two repeated-measures studies we examined whether adaptation to upward-shifting prisms, resulting in a downward after-effect, could improve gait initiation in healthy participants and patients with Parkinson's disease. Faster forward stepping followed a brief (5 min) exposure period for patients, and a longer (20 min) exposure period for age-matched controls. Backward stepping was unchanged, and adaptation to downward-shifting prisms with control participants showed no effect on forward or backward stepping. These results suggest that adaptation of arm proprioception in the vertical plane may generalize to anterior-posterior postural control, presenting new possibilities for the treatment of gait disturbance in basal ganglia disorders. © 2012 Bultitude, Rafal and Tinker.

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Bultitude, J. H., Rafal, R. D., & Tinker, C. (2012). Moving forward with prisms: Sensory-motor adaptation improves gait initiation in Parkinson’s disease. Frontiers in Neurology, SEP. https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2012.00132

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