Published 2009
| Version v1
Publication
Cervical dystonia affects aimed movements of non dystonic segments
Contributors
Description
Patients with focal dystonia exhibit proprioception
abnormalities that can lead to kinematic deficits. Proprioceptive
abnormalities are present in both symptomatic and
asymptomatic body parts of dystonic patients. To ascertain
whether in patients with idiopathic cervical dystonia (CD)
movements performed with nondystonic segments display kinematic
abnormalities, we studied trajectory formation of out
and back arm reaching movements in 10 patients with CD
(before and 3 weeks after treatment with Botulinum toxin)
and in 10 age-matched controls. Before treatment, patients
with CD showed significant trajectory abnormalities when
compared with normal controls. Patients' trajectories were
more curved with asymmetrical temporal velocity profiles as
well as increased hand path areas, and had longer reversal
lags between the out and back segments. Treatment with botulinum
toxin improved all the kinematic parameters. These
results suggest that in patients with CD, movements performed
with nondystonic segments are abnormal. The kinematic
abnormalities are likely to derive from long-standing
defective integration of the proprioceptive input, which, in
turn, causes general changes in the internal models of limb
dynamics. It is plausible that treatment with botulinum toxin
partially restores proprioceptive processing and thus, such internal
models
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/267500
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/267500
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE