Sheridan M R, Flowers K A, Hurrell J
Department of Psychology, University of Hull, UK.
Brain. 1987 Oct;110 ( Pt 5):1247-71. doi: 10.1093/brain/110.5.1247.
Programming and execution of arm movements in Parkinson's disease were investigated in choice and simple reaction time (RT) situations in which subjects made aimed movements at a target. A no-aiming condition was also studied. Reaction time was fractionated using surface EMG recording into premotor (central) and motor (peripheral) components. Premotor RT was found to be greater for parkinsonian patients than normal age-matched controls in the simple RT condition, but not in the choice condition. This effect did not depend on the parameters of the impending movement. Thus, paradoxically, parkinsonian patients were not inherently slower at initiating aiming movements from the starting position, but seemed unable to use advance information concerning motor task demands to speed up movement initiation. For both groups, low velocity movements took longer to initiate than high velocity ones. In the no-aiming condition parkinsonian RTs were markedly shorter than when aiming, but were still significantly longer than control RTs. Motor RT was constant across all conditions and was not different for patient and control subjects. In all conditions, parkinsonian movements were around 37% slower than control movements, and their movement times were more variable, the differences showing up early on in the movement, that is, during the initial ballistic phase. The within-subject variability of movement endpoints was also greater in patients. The motor dysfunction displayed in Parkinson's disease involves a number of components: (1) a basic central problem with simply initiating movements, even when minimal programming is required (no-aiming condition); (2) difficulty in maintaining computed forces for motor programs over time (simple RT condition); (3) a basic slowness of movement (bradykinesia) in all conditions; and (4) increased variability of movement in both time and space, presumably caused by inherent variability in force production.
在帕金森病患者进行指向目标的选择反应时和简单反应时(RT)情境中,研究了手臂运动的编程和执行情况。还研究了无指向条件。通过表面肌电图记录将反应时分为运动前(中枢)和运动(外周)成分。发现在简单反应时条件下,帕金森病患者的运动前反应时比年龄匹配的正常对照组更长,但在选择反应时条件下并非如此。这种效应不依赖于即将进行的运动参数。因此,矛盾的是,帕金森病患者从起始位置启动指向运动时并非天生就更慢,而是似乎无法利用有关运动任务需求的提前信息来加快运动启动。对于两组来说,低速运动比高速运动启动所需时间更长。在无指向条件下,帕金森病患者的反应时明显短于指向时,但仍显著长于对照组的反应时。运动反应时在所有条件下都是恒定的,患者和对照组受试者并无差异。在所有条件下,帕金森病患者的运动速度比对照组慢约37%,且他们的运动时间更具变异性,差异在运动早期即初始弹道阶段就已显现。患者运动终点的个体内变异性也更大。帕金森病所表现出的运动功能障碍涉及多个方面:(1)即使在只需极少编程的情况下(无指向条件),简单启动运动时存在基本的中枢问题;(2)随着时间推移,难以维持运动程序计算出的力量(简单反应时条件);(3)在所有条件下运动基本迟缓(运动徐缓);(4)运动在时间和空间上的变异性增加,可能是由力量产生的内在变异性所致。