Boonstra T A, Schouten A C, van Vugt J P P, Bloem B R, van der Kooij H
Department of Biomechanical Engineering, University of Twente, MIRA Institute for Biomechanical Technology and Technical Medicine, Enschede, The Netherlands;
Department of Biomechanical Engineering, University of Twente, MIRA Institute for Biomechanical Technology and Technical Medicine, Enschede, The Netherlands; Department of Biomechanical Engineering, Delft University of Technology, Delft, The Netherlands;
J Neurophysiol. 2014 Dec 15;112(12):3227-39. doi: 10.1152/jn.00813.2013. Epub 2014 Sep 24.
In Parkinson's disease (PD) subtle balance abnormalities can already be detected in early-stage patients. One feature of impaired balance control in PD is asymmetry: one leg produces more corrective joint torque than the other. We hypothesize that in mild to moderately affected PD patients, the least impaired leg compensates for the more impaired leg. Twenty PD patients and eleven healthy matched control subjects participated. Clinical asymmetry was determined by the difference between the left and right body side scores on the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale. Balance was perturbed with two independent continuous multisine perturbations in the forward-backward direction. Subsequently, we applied closed-loop system identification, which determined the spectral estimate of the stabilizing mechanisms, for each leg. Balance control behavior was similar in PD patients and control subjects at the ankle, but at the hip stiffness was increased. Control subjects exhibited symmetric balance control, but in PD patients the balance contribution of the leg of the clinically least affected body side was higher whereas the leg of the clinically most affected body side contributed less. The ratio between the legs helped to preserve a normal motor output at the ankle. Our results suggest that PD patients compensate for balance control asymmetries by increasing the relative contribution of the leg of their least affected body side. This compensation appears to be successful at the ankle but is accompanied by an increased stiffness at the hip. We discuss the possible implications of these findings for postural stability and fall risk in PD patients.
在帕金森病(PD)中,早期患者即可检测到细微的平衡异常。PD患者平衡控制受损的一个特征是不对称:一条腿产生的纠正关节扭矩比另一条腿更多。我们假设,在轻度至中度受影响的PD患者中,受损较轻的腿会补偿受损较重的腿。20名PD患者和11名健康匹配对照受试者参与了研究。临床不对称性通过统一帕金森病评定量表上左右身体侧评分的差异来确定。通过在前后方向上的两次独立连续多正弦扰动来干扰平衡。随后,我们对每条腿应用了闭环系统识别,该识别确定了稳定机制的频谱估计。PD患者和对照受试者在脚踝处的平衡控制行为相似,但在髋关节处刚度增加。对照受试者表现出对称的平衡控制,但在PD患者中,临床受影响最小身体侧的腿对平衡的贡献更高,而临床受影响最大身体侧的腿贡献较小。两腿之间的比例有助于在脚踝处保持正常的运动输出。我们的结果表明,PD患者通过增加其受影响最小身体侧的腿的相对贡献来补偿平衡控制的不对称性。这种补偿在脚踝处似乎是成功的,但同时伴随着髋关节刚度的增加。我们讨论了这些发现对PD患者姿势稳定性和跌倒风险的可能影响。