AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated the relationship between movement slowness in individuals with Parkinson's disease and their ability to generate net torques across joints during planar movements.
  • Ten individuals with Parkinson's disease and ten healthy controls performed movements, and researchers analyzed the joint kinematics and torques at the elbow and shoulder.
  • Results showed that while both groups adjusted their net torques based on target distances, those with Parkinson's struggled to generate the necessary muscle and net torques, indicating a link between movement slowness and torque generation difficulties.

Article Abstract

We tested if the movement slowness of individuals with Parkinson's disease is related to their decreased ability to generate adequate net torques and linearly coordinate them between joints. This cross-sectional study included ten individuals with Parkinson's disease and ten healthy individuals. They performed planar movements with a reversal over three target distances. We calculated joint kinematics of the elbow and shoulder using spatial orientation. The muscle, interaction, and net torques were integrated into the acceleration/deceleration phases of the fingertip speed. We calculated the linear correlations of those torques between joints. Both groups modulated the elbow and shoulder net torques with target distances. They linearly coupled the production of torques. Both groups did not modulate the interaction torques. The movement slowness in Parkinson's disease was related to the difficulty in generating the appropriate muscle and net torques in the task. The interaction torques do not seem to play any role in movement control.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222895.2024.2350723DOI Listing

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