Anticipatory and compensatory postural adjustments in response to external lateral shoulder perturbations in subjects with Parkinson's disease

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Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate the anticipatory (APA) and compensatory (CPA) postural adjustments in individuals with Parkinson's disease (PD) during lateral instability of posture. Twenty-six subjects (13 individuals with PD and 13 healthy matched controls) were exposed to predictable lateral postural perturbations. The electromyographic (EMG) activity of the lateral muscles and the displacement of the center of pressure (COP) were recorded during four time intervals that are typical for postural adjustments, i.e., immediately before (APA1, APA2) and after (CPA1 and CPA2) the postural disturbances. The magnitude of the activity of the lateral muscles in the group with PD was lower only during the CPA time intervals and not during the anticipatory adjustments (APAs). Despite this finding, subjects with PD exhibit smaller COP excursions before and after the disturbance, probably due to lack of flexibility and proprioceptive impairments. The results of this study suggest that postural instability in subjects with PD can be partially explained by decreased postural sway, before and after perturbations, and reduced muscular activity after body disturbances. Our findings can motivate new studies to investigate therapeutic interventions that optimize the use of postural adjustment strategies in subjects with PD.

Figures

  • Fig 1. Schematic representation of the pendulum used to induce the postural disturbances. The participants kept their head rotated 30 degrees toward the pendulum. 1: pendulum, 2: pulley system, 3: load attached to the pendulum, 4: ball and the accelerometer, 5: distance of the pendulum release (0.8 m), 6: safety belt.
  • Table 1. Characteristics of the participants with Parkinson’s disease.
  • Table 2. Characteristics of the participants in the control group.
  • Fig 2. Typical EMG patterns of the right gluteusmedius (rGM) activity for two representative subjects (healthy control vs. patient with Parkinson’s disease). The pointing down arrow at time 0 represents the moment of the pendulum impact against the subject’s shoulder.
  • Fig 3. Anticipatory (APA1 and APA2) and compensatory (CPA1 and CPA2) time intervals for the GM, EO and PE right and left lateral muscles for each group (average across 13 subjects). *Significant differences between groups (P<0.05).
  • Fig 4. Means and standard errors of the center of pressure displacement in mediolateral (COPml) (right panel) and anteroposterior directions (COPap) (left panel) for the control and PD groups during the 4 time intervals for anticipatory (APA1 and APA2) and compensatory (CPA1 and CPA2) postural adjustments. The positive and negative signs in mediolateral direction represent the left and right sides, respectively. The positive signs denote anterior displacement while negative signs represent posterior excursion.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

De Azevedo, A. K. E. C., Claudino, R., Conceição, J. S., Swarowsky, A., & Dos Santos, M. J. (2016). Anticipatory and compensatory postural adjustments in response to external lateral shoulder perturbations in subjects with Parkinson’s disease. PLoS ONE, 11(5). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0155012

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