1. Orthostatic tremor during modification of standing
- Author
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Christoph Krick, Gerhard Fuss, Ulrich Dillmann, Georg Becker, Dania Sood, and Jörg Spiegel
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Posture ,Electromyography ,Functional Laterality ,Tilt table test ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Tilt-Table Test ,Orientation ,Afferent ,Tremor ,Humans ,Medicine ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Aged ,Orthostatic tremor ,Involuntary movement ,Afferent Pathways ,Leg ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Parkinson Disease ,Middle Aged ,Neurology ,Primary orthostatic tremor ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Primary orthostatic tremor (OT) occurs only during standing. We studied whether modification of the condition standing influences OT. In seven patients with OT, surface EMG was recorded from both tibialis anterior and gastrocnemius muscles during two maneuvers: relief, whereby the patient was gradually lifted by a crane, and tilting, whereby the patient was tilted by a tilting table to positions of 90 degrees (upright standing), 45 degrees (diagonal position), and 0 degrees (lying position). We determined the parameters tremor frequency, tremor intensity, coherence, and phase shift between the different muscles. Relief did not influence OT. In contrast, tilting modified significantly tremor intensity and phase shifts; tremor frequencies and coherences were not influenced. We chose both these maneuvers because of their different impact on the standing condition: relief modifies the factors afferent input and muscle forcing but not the factor postural set, whereas tilting modifies all three factors. The fact that tilting modifies OT, whereas relief does not, suggests an important role of postural set in OT generation. Afferent input and muscle forcing seem to play less important role.
- Published
- 2006