1. Sensory perception in Parkinson disease.
- Author
-
Jobst EE, Melnick ME, Byl NN, Dowling GA, and Aminoff MJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Kinesthesis, Motor Activity, Motor Skills, Touch, Vision, Ocular, Parkinson Disease physiopathology, Sensation Disorders physiopathology
- Abstract
Objective: To determine whether there is a complex sensory disturbance that may be contributing to the motor deficit in patients with Parkinson disease., Design: Comparison of performance by patients and healthy, age- and sex-matched subjects in tests of various sensory functions., Setting: The Center for Human Performance and Testing at a university hospital and research center., Participants: Ten subjects with Parkinson disease and 10 control subjects matched for age and sex., Main Outcome Measure: Performance on 4 subjects of the Sensory Integration and Praxis Test: finger identification, graphesthesia, localization of tactile stimuli, and kinesthesia., Results: Data were analyzed using paired t tests for ratio data and the paired Wilcoxon test for ordinal data. Patients with Parkinson disease performed significantly worse (P = .001) than the control patients on the test of kinesthesia. There were no significant differences between the 2 groups on the other subtests., Conclusions: Without visual guidance, patients with Parkinson disease had more difficulty in perceiving the extent of a movement made to a target away from the body, a task requiring reliance on proprioceptive feedback. Parkinsonian patients had no more difficulty than controls in making movements to a target on the surface of the body when they could use tactile sensations. Movement difficulties in patients with Parkinson disease may relate in part to a decrease in proprioception. Activities that enhance kinesthetic awareness may be an important adjunct to the treatment of these patients.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF