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A spatiotemporal analysis of gait freezing and the impact of pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation

Gait freezing is an episodic arrest of locomotion due to an inability to take normal steps. Pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation is an emerging therapy proposed to improve gait freezing, even where refractory to medication. However, the efficacy and precise effects of pedunculopontine nucleus stimul...

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Autores principales: Thevathasan, Wesley, Cole, Michael H., Graepel, Cara L., Hyam, Jonathan A., Jenkinson, Ned, Brittain, John-Stuart, Coyne, Terry J., Silburn, Peter A., Aziz, Tipu Z., Kerr, Graham, Brown, Peter
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3338924/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22396391
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/aws039
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author Thevathasan, Wesley
Cole, Michael H.
Graepel, Cara L.
Hyam, Jonathan A.
Jenkinson, Ned
Brittain, John-Stuart
Coyne, Terry J.
Silburn, Peter A.
Aziz, Tipu Z.
Kerr, Graham
Brown, Peter
author_facet Thevathasan, Wesley
Cole, Michael H.
Graepel, Cara L.
Hyam, Jonathan A.
Jenkinson, Ned
Brittain, John-Stuart
Coyne, Terry J.
Silburn, Peter A.
Aziz, Tipu Z.
Kerr, Graham
Brown, Peter
author_sort Thevathasan, Wesley
collection PubMed
description Gait freezing is an episodic arrest of locomotion due to an inability to take normal steps. Pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation is an emerging therapy proposed to improve gait freezing, even where refractory to medication. However, the efficacy and precise effects of pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation on Parkinsonian gait disturbance are not established. The clinical application of this new therapy is controversial and it is unknown if bilateral stimulation is more effective than unilateral. Here, in a double-blinded study using objective spatiotemporal gait analysis, we assessed the impact of unilateral and bilateral pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation on triggered episodes of gait freezing and on background deficits of unconstrained gait in Parkinson’s disease. Under experimental conditions, while OFF medication, Parkinsonian patients with severe gait freezing implanted with pedunculopontine nucleus stimulators below the pontomesencephalic junction were assessed during three conditions; off stimulation, unilateral stimulation and bilateral stimulation. Results were compared to Parkinsonian patients without gait freezing matched for disease severity and healthy controls. Pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation improved objective measures of gait freezing, with bilateral stimulation more effective than unilateral. During unconstrained walking, Parkinsonian patients who experience gait freezing had reduced step length and increased step length variability compared to patients without gait freezing; however, these deficits were unchanged by pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation. Chronic pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation improved Freezing of Gait Questionnaire scores, reflecting a reduction of the freezing encountered in patients’ usual environments and medication states. This study provides objective, double-blinded evidence that in a specific subgroup of Parkinsonian patients, stimulation of a caudal pedunculopontine nucleus region selectively improves gait freezing but not background deficits in step length. Bilateral stimulation was more effective than unilateral.
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spelling pubmed-33389242012-04-30 A spatiotemporal analysis of gait freezing and the impact of pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation Thevathasan, Wesley Cole, Michael H. Graepel, Cara L. Hyam, Jonathan A. Jenkinson, Ned Brittain, John-Stuart Coyne, Terry J. Silburn, Peter A. Aziz, Tipu Z. Kerr, Graham Brown, Peter Brain Original Articles Gait freezing is an episodic arrest of locomotion due to an inability to take normal steps. Pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation is an emerging therapy proposed to improve gait freezing, even where refractory to medication. However, the efficacy and precise effects of pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation on Parkinsonian gait disturbance are not established. The clinical application of this new therapy is controversial and it is unknown if bilateral stimulation is more effective than unilateral. Here, in a double-blinded study using objective spatiotemporal gait analysis, we assessed the impact of unilateral and bilateral pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation on triggered episodes of gait freezing and on background deficits of unconstrained gait in Parkinson’s disease. Under experimental conditions, while OFF medication, Parkinsonian patients with severe gait freezing implanted with pedunculopontine nucleus stimulators below the pontomesencephalic junction were assessed during three conditions; off stimulation, unilateral stimulation and bilateral stimulation. Results were compared to Parkinsonian patients without gait freezing matched for disease severity and healthy controls. Pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation improved objective measures of gait freezing, with bilateral stimulation more effective than unilateral. During unconstrained walking, Parkinsonian patients who experience gait freezing had reduced step length and increased step length variability compared to patients without gait freezing; however, these deficits were unchanged by pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation. Chronic pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation improved Freezing of Gait Questionnaire scores, reflecting a reduction of the freezing encountered in patients’ usual environments and medication states. This study provides objective, double-blinded evidence that in a specific subgroup of Parkinsonian patients, stimulation of a caudal pedunculopontine nucleus region selectively improves gait freezing but not background deficits in step length. Bilateral stimulation was more effective than unilateral. Oxford University Press 2012-05 2012-03-06 /pmc/articles/PMC3338924/ /pubmed/22396391 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/aws039 Text en © The Author (2012). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0), which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Thevathasan, Wesley
Cole, Michael H.
Graepel, Cara L.
Hyam, Jonathan A.
Jenkinson, Ned
Brittain, John-Stuart
Coyne, Terry J.
Silburn, Peter A.
Aziz, Tipu Z.
Kerr, Graham
Brown, Peter
A spatiotemporal analysis of gait freezing and the impact of pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation
title A spatiotemporal analysis of gait freezing and the impact of pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation
title_full A spatiotemporal analysis of gait freezing and the impact of pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation
title_fullStr A spatiotemporal analysis of gait freezing and the impact of pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation
title_full_unstemmed A spatiotemporal analysis of gait freezing and the impact of pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation
title_short A spatiotemporal analysis of gait freezing and the impact of pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation
title_sort spatiotemporal analysis of gait freezing and the impact of pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3338924/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22396391
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/aws039
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