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Balance and Motor Speech Impairment in Essential Tremor

Authors :
Benedikt Frank
Peter C. Reinacher
Juergen Konczak
Paul Buderath
Dagmar Timmann
Wolfram Ziegler
Volker A. Coenen
Martin Kronenbuerger
Karl L. Kiening
Johannes Noth
Source :
The Cerebellum. 8:389-398
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2009.

Abstract

The pathogenesis of essential tremor (ET) is still under debate. Several lines of evidence indicate that ET is associated with cerebellar dysfunction. The aim of the present study was to find corroborating evidence for this claim by investigating balance and speech impairments in patients with ET. In addition, the effect of deep brain stimulation (DBS) on balance and speech function was studied. A group of 25 ET patients including 18 with postural and/or simple kinetic tremor (ETpt) and seven ET patients with additional clinical signs of cerebellar dysfunction (ETc) was compared to 25 healthy controls. In addition, 12 ET patients with thalamic DBS participated in the study. Balance control was assessed during gait and stance including tandem gait performed on a treadmill as well as static and dynamic posturography. Motor speech control was analyzed through syllable repetition tasks. Signs of balance impairment were found in early stages and advanced stages of ET. During locomotion, ET patients exhibited an increased number of missteps and shortened stride length with tandem gait. ETc patients and, to a lesser extent, ETpt patients had increased postural instability in dynamic posturography conditions that are sensitive to vestibular or vestibulocerebellar dysfunction. ETc but not ETpt patients exhibited significantly increased syllable durations. DBS had no discernable effect on speech performance or balance control. We conclude that the deficits in balance as well as the subclinical signs of dysarthria in a subset of patients confirm and extend previous findings that ET is associated with an impairment of the cerebellum.

Details

ISSN :
14734230 and 14734222
Volume :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Cerebellum
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0021dc104d91ab948f8a16974c8d0c9d