Publications by authors named "Melanie Rambour"

Background: Parkinsonian patients have a tendency to speed up during repetitive motor tasks (festination) and to experience sudden motor blocks (freezing). In this article, we prospectively studied the appearance and progression of these phenomena in 30 early-stage PD patients.

Methods: A total of 30 controls and early-stage PD patients were assessed in the "off-drug" condition at baseline and 2 years later.

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Objective: To determine whether or not modulation of the excitability of the M1 region controlling the lower limb (using repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation; TMS) would change the TA's activity during gait and the effect of aging on this change.

Methods: In three separate sessions, participants underwent different repetitive TMS (rTMS) protocols (sham stimulation, intermittent theta-burst stimulation (TBS) and continuous TBS) delivered over the M1 region controlling the lower limb muscles, using a focal, figure-of-eight coil. Before and after rTMS, the TA's activity was recorded using surface electrodes while participants walked at a freely chosen speed and at an imposed speed on a treadmill.

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Falls frequently occur during daily activities such as reaching for an object in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). Misjudgment is also reported to be one of the circumstances that lead to falls. The functional reach test is an indicator of dynamic balance.

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The objective of the present study was to investigate the time course of long-interval intracortical inhibition (LICI) and late cortical disinhibition (LCD) as a function of the motor task (index abduction, thumb-index precision grip). Motor-evoked potentials were recorded from the first dorsal interosseus (FDI) muscle of the dominant limb in 13 healthy subjects. We used paired-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) paradigms in which a test pulse was preceded by a suprathreshold priming pulse (130% of the resting motor threshold) with varying interstimulus intervals (ISIs).

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