Motor facilitation during real-time movement imitation in Parkinson's disease: A virtual reality study

Robles-Garcia, V; Arias P.; Sanmartin, G; Espinosa N.; Flores, J; Grieve, KL; Cudeiro, J

Keywords: movement, parkinson's disease, virtual environment, Imitative behavior

Abstract

Background: Impaired temporal stability and poor motor unit recruitment are key impairments in Parkinsonian motor control during a whole spectrum of rhythmic movements, from simple finger tapping to gait. Therapies based on imitation can be designed for patients with motor impairments and virtual-reality (VR) offers a new perspective. Motor actions are known to depend upon the dopaminergic system, whose involvement in imitation is unknown. We sought to understand this role and the underlying possibilities for motor rehabilitation, by observing the execution of different motor-patterns during imitation in a VR environment in subjects with and without dopaminergic deficits. Methods: 10 OFF-dose idiopathic Parkinson's Disease patients (PD), 9 age-matched and 9 young-subjects participated. Subjects performed finger-tapping at their comfort and slow-comfort rates, while immersed in VR presenting their avatar in 1st person perspective. Imitation was evaluated by asking subjects to replicate finger-tapping patterns different to their natural one. The finger-pattern presented matched their comfort and comfort-slow rates, but without a pause on the table (continuously moving). Results: Patients were able to adapt their finger-tapping correctly, showing that in comparison with the control groups, the dopaminergic deficiency of PD did not impair imitation. During imitation the magnitude of EMG increased and the temporal variability of movement decreased. Conclusions: PD-patients have unaltered ability to imitate instructed motor-patterns, suggesting that a fully-functional dopaminergic system is not essential for such imitation. It should be further investigated if imitation training over a period of time induces positive off-line motor adaptations with transfer to non-imitation tasks. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Más información

Título según WOS: Motor facilitation during real-time movement imitation in Parkinson's disease: A virtual reality study
Título de la Revista: PARKINSONISM & RELATED DISORDERS
Volumen: 19
Número: 12
Editorial: ELSEVIER SCI LTD
Fecha de publicación: 2013
Página de inicio: 1123
Página final: 1129
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.1016/j.parkreldis.2013.08.005

Notas: ISI