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Incongruent visual feedback during a postural task enhances cortical alpha and beta modulation in patients with Parkinson's disease

Authors :
Andreas Daffertshofer
Maarten R.C. van den Heuvel
Erwin E. H. van Wegen
Gert Kwakkel
Peter J. Beek
Amsterdam Neuroscience - Neurovascular Disorders
Rehabilitation medicine
Amsterdam Movement Sciences - Restoration and Development
AMS - Restoration and Development
IBBA
Coordination Dynamics
Faculty of Behavioural and Movement Sciences
Source :
van den Heuvel, M R C, van Wegen, E E H, Beek, P J, Kwakkel, G & Daffertshofer, A 2018, ' Incongruent visual feedback during a postural task enhances cortical alpha and beta modulation in patients with Parkinson's disease ', Clinical Neurophysiology, vol. 129, no. 7, pp. 1357-1365 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clinph.2018.04.602, Clinical Neurophysiology, 129(7), 1357-1365. Elsevier Ireland Ltd, Clinical Neurophysiology, 129(7), 1357-1365. International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: In patients with Parkinson's disease (PD), augmented visual feedback (VF) can improve functional motor performance. Conversely, they appear to rely more on visual information than healthy subjects, which is unfavorable when this information is unreliable. Cortical beta activity is thought to be associated with the need for motor adaptation. We here compared event-related EEG parameters during a whole-body postural weight-shifting task between congruent and incongruent feedback conditions.METHODS: Twenty-four patients with PD and fifteen healthy, age- and gender-matched controls performed rhythmic swaying movements. VF was presented in real-time (congruent), delayed (incongruent), or was entirely absent. We estimated source activity in four regions-of-interest and determined motor-related spectral power and power modulation in alpha and beta frequency bands.RESULTS: For congruent VF no significant differences in cortical activity between the two groups were present. For incongruent VF, the PD group showed significantly higher beta modulation in primary motor cortex, and higher alpha modulation in primary visual cortex.CONCLUSIONS: Event-related beta modulation in the motor network and alpha modulation in visual areas discriminated between groups, suggesting altered visuomotor processing in PD patients.SIGNIFICANCE: This study finds evidence for increased modulation of alpha/beta activity during perceptual-motor tasks in PD, possibly indicating an unwarranted higher confidence in VF.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13882457
Volume :
129
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Neurophysiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7adf89d5b6a5b74166830e5740739cf5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clinph.2018.04.602