AI Article Synopsis

  • Postural instability during gait initiation is a key factor affecting the quality of life for individuals with Parkinson's disease (PD) because it leads to falls.
  • A study involving both unmedicated PD patients and healthy controls revealed that PD patients had decreased movement metrics like center of pressure displacement and first step length, which are linked to dopaminergic function in the putamen and improved with levodopa treatment.
  • The findings highlight the role of dopamine in the initial phases of posture control, while indicating that other factors such as foot placement specifically impact later phases of gait initiation.

Article Abstract

Postural instability, in particular at gait initiation (GI), and resulting falls are a major determinant of poor quality of life in subjects with Parkinson's disease (PD). Still, the contribution of the basal ganglia and dopamine on the feedforward postural control associated with this motor task is poorly known. In addition, the influence of anthropometric measures (AM) and initial stance condition on GI has never been consistently assessed. The biomechanical resultants of anticipatory postural adjustments contributing to GI [imbalance (IMB), unloading (UNL), and stepping phase) were studied in 26 unmedicated subjects with idiopathic PD and in 27 healthy subjects. A subset of 13 patients was analyzed under standardized medication conditions and the striatal dopaminergic innervation was studied in 22 patients using FP-CIT and SPECT. People with PD showed a significant reduction in center of pressure (CoP) displacement and velocity during the IMB phase, reduced first step length and velocity, and decreased velocity and acceleration of the center of mass (CoM) at toe off of the stance foot. All these measurements correlated with the dopaminergic innervation of the putamen and substantially improved with levodopa. These results were not influenced by anthropometric parameters or by the initial stance condition. In contrast, most of the measurements of the UNL phase were influenced by the foot placement and did not correlate with putaminal dopaminergic innervation. Our results suggest a significant role of dopamine and the putamen particularly in the elaboration of the IMB phase of anticipatory postural adjustments and in the execution of the first step. The basal ganglia circuitry may contribute to defining the optimal referent body configuration for a proper initiation of gait and possibly gait adaptation to the environment.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7068722PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2020.00137DOI Listing

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