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Query: UMLS:C0030567 (
Parkinson's disease
)
63,064
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We studied reflexive and predictive saccades by direct current electro-oculography in nine patients with mild hemi-
Parkinson's disease
(hemi-PD) and in 16 age-matched controls. In five patients, the neurological syndrome was predominant on the right side of the body (RPD) and in four patients, on the left side (
LPD
). Reflexive saccades were elicited in response to the random appearance (timing and location) of a light-emitting diode (LED). Predictive saccades were elicited by alternatively illuminating LEDs at 10 degrees right and left, at various fixed frequencies (0.25-1 Hz). In the reflexive task, latency and amplitude of the saccades were normal in both PD groups. In the predictive task, mean saccade latency was not significantly different between patients and normals but there were two significant abnormalities in timing: first, but only in
LPD
, a directional asymmetry in latency (left greater than right, e.g. at 0.25 Hz, mean difference of 90 ms); secondly, especially in RPD, an abnormal tracking pattern, reflected by more variability of the mean value (for each group of patients) of saccade latency at each point in time, throughout a period of tracking at a given frequency. Predictive saccades were also strongly hypometric in both PD groups but especially in
LPD
(e.g. for rightwards saccades: controls = 19 degrees, SD = 1.6;
LPD
= 14 degrees, SD = 2.7; RPD = 15.7 degrees, SD = 2.3). These defects in saccadic timing and amplitude during predictive tracking were most salient at low frequencies. While these defects were largely bilateral, our findings suggest slightly different contributions of the right and left cerebral hemispheres to the spatial and timing components, respectively, that comprise optimal predictive saccadic behaviour.
...
PMID:Abnormalities of predictive saccades in hemi-Parkinson's disease. 139 8
Cognitive and cerebral blood flow (CBF) lateral asymmetries have been quantified in 23 right handed patients with lateralised idiopathic
Parkinson's disease
. Thirteen patients who had predominant right-sided symptoms (RPD) were compared with ten who had predominant left-sided symptoms (
LPD
). The patient subgroups were matched for age, education, duration of illness, disease severity and medication. Normalised asymmetries scores were calculated from the data obtained with a test battery and SPECT. No correlation was found between laterality of motor Parkinsonian symptoms and cognitive or haemodynamic asymmetry scores.
...
PMID:Cognition and cerebral blood flow in lateralised parkinsonism: lack of functional lateral asymmetries. 195 95
The perception of extrapersonal space in
Parkinson's disease
was examined with two line bisection tasks. One was a conventional pencil and paper test, the line bisection section of the Behavioural Inattention Test. In the other, the stimuli were displayed on a large (2x2.4 m) screen and varied in length (48-480 mm) and also in location on the screen (left, centre and right). They were presented at two viewing distances (0.6 and 1.5 m). Subjects remotely adjusted the position of a cursor until it appeared to bisect the stimulus line, using two push-buttons, one in each hand. The PD participants (n=18) had a marked asymmetry of motor symptoms. They were divided into two groups, those with predominantly left-sided motor symptoms (
LPD
, n=9), and those with predominantly right-sided motor symptoms (RPD, n=9). The control group (n=9) were all right-handed. No significant differences between the groups were found on the BIT bisection task. In contrast, when the stimuli were presented on the screen,
LPD
subjects showed a significant rightward bias in their settings of the cursor, particularly for lines on the left and centre of the screen, which was greater, the longer the stimulus line. The RPD group bisected lines slightly to the left, in common with the control group (pseudo-neglect). In a second experiment, Parkinsonian subjects repeated this task, but with the buttons reversed between the hands, so that the cursor was moved to the left by the right hand, and vice versa, but the pattern of results was the same as in the first experiment. The data suggest a small but reliable neglect in left hemiparkinson's disease, which is contralateral to the non-dominant (and probably worse affected) hemisphere. The dissociation between the response and the bisection error suggests a visuospatial impairment in
LPD
.
...
PMID:Evidence from a line bisection task for visuospatial neglect in left hemiparkinson's disease. 1152 May 13
It has been suggested that dopamine is an important neurotransmitter in the brain mechanisms which represent the upper visual field. This idea was tested with a vertical line bisection task in unilateral
Parkinson's disease
. Stimuli of a range of lengths were presented on a large screen in three positions (left, centre and right) and at two viewing distances (0.6 and 1.5m). The patients, who were compared with a group of normal age-matched controls, comprised 16 sufferers from predominantly unilateral disease, 8 with more severe left-sided symptoms (
LPD
) and 8 with more severe right-sided symptoms (RPD). The
LPD
group consistently set the bisecting cursor below the midpoint of the stimulus lines, and their bisection error became larger as the length of the line increased. In contrast, the controls set the cursor above the midpoint of the line, an error which also increased with line length. The settings of the RPD group were similar to those of the controls. The results suggest altitudinal neglect in left unilateral PD, and support the hypothesis of dopaminergic involvement in the coding of upper visual space, with the proviso that the perceptual component of this involves the right hemisphere in humans.
...
PMID:Dopamine and the representation of the upper visual field: evidence from vertical bisection errors in unilateral Parkinson's disease. 1220 99
The visual perception of size in different regions of external space was studied in
Parkinson's disease
(PD). A group of patients with worse left-sided symptoms (
LPD
) was compared with a group with worse right-sided symptoms (RPD) and with a group of age-matched controls on judgements of the relative height or width of two rectangles presented in different regions of external space. The relevant dimension of one rectangle (the 'standard') was held constant, while that of the other (the 'variable') was varied in a method of constant stimuli. The point of subjective equality (PSE) of rectangle width or height was obtained by probit analysis as the mean of the resulting psychometric function. When the standard was in left space, the PSE of the
LPD
group occurred when the variable was smaller, and when the standard was in right space, when the variable was larger. Similarly, when the standard rectangle was presented in upper space, and the variable in lower space, the PSE occurred when the variable was smaller, an effect which was similar in both left and right spaces. In all these experiments, the PSEs for both the controls and the RPD group did not differ significantly, and were close to a physical match, and the slopes of the psychometric functions were steeper in the controls than the patients, though not significantly so. The data suggest that objects appear smaller in the left and upper visual spaces in
LPD
, probably because of right hemisphere impairment.
...
PMID:Hemispace differences in the visual perception of size in left hemiParkinson's disease. 1263 30
The question of whether
Parkinson's disease
(PD) patients who have left (
LPD
) or right (RPD) motor predominance also exhibit cognitive differences is controversial. We examined this issue using a neuropsychological battery designed to provide a balanced sampling of both right- and left-hemispheric functions. RPD patients were impaired relative to
LPD
patients on verbally mediated tasks (left hemisphere function), but there was no group difference for visuospatial tasks (right-hemispheric function). In addition, there was a significant correlation between the extent of right side motor predominance and performance on verbal tasks, but there was no relationship between left side motor symptoms and performance on visuospatial tasks. The controversy related to cognitive differences in hemiparkinsonism may be due to the balance of the assessment procedure, the severity of motor asymmetry, or both.
...
PMID:Asymmetrical cognitive differences associated with hemiparkinsonism. 1459 98
The mental rotation of objects requires visuospatial functions mediated by the parietal lobes, whereas the mental rotation of hands also engages frontal motor-system processes. Nondemented patients with
Parkinson's disease
(PD), a frontostriatal disorder, were predicted to be impaired on mentally rotating hands. Side of PD motor symptom onset was investigated because the left motor cortices likely have a causal role in hand mental rotation. The prediction was that patients with right-side onset (RPD, greater left-hemisphere dysfunction) would commit more errors rotating hands than patients with left-side onset (
LPD
). Fifteen
LPD
, 12 RPD, and 13 normal control adults (NC) made same/different judgments about pairs of rotated objects or hands. There were no group differences with objects. When rotating hands, RPD, but not
LPD
, made more errors than the NC group. A control experiment evaluated whether visual field of presentation explained differences between PD subgroups. In the first experiment (1A), the hand to be mentally rotated was presented in the right visual field, but here (1B) it was presented in the left visual field. Only the
LPD
group made more errors than the NC group. The evidence suggests a double dissociation for the RPD and
LPD
groups between tasks differing in visual-field presentation. The findings indicate that hemifield location of a to-be-rotated hand stimulus can cause the hemispheric frontoparietal networks to be differentially engaged. Moreover, frontostriatal motor systems and the parietal lobes play a necessary role during the mental rotation of hands, which requires integrating visuospatial cognition with motor imagery.
...
PMID:Frontostriatal circuits are necessary for visuomotor transformation: mental rotation in Parkinson's disease. 1606 Dec 63
The relation of body side of motor symptom onset in
Parkinson's disease
(PD) to memory measures associated with hemispheric dominance was examined. Fourteen patients with right body side motor symptom onset (RPD, inferred left hemisphere dysfunction) and 16 patients with left side onset (
LPD
, right hemisphere dysfunction) were administered measures of verbal (Hopkins Verbal Learning Test-Revised) and visual memory (Brief Visual Memory Test-Revised), that require similar task demands and are associated with left or right hemisphere dominance, respectively. The
LPD
group demonstrated poorer visual than verbal memory, both within group and in comparison to the RPD group. By contrast, the RPD group showed poorer verbal than visual memory within group. These findings suggest that side of motor symptom onset is associated with asymmetrical memory dysfunction.
...
PMID:Body side of motor symptom onset in Parkinson's disease is associated with memory performance. 1696 53
Studies suggest motor deficit asymmetry may help predict the pattern of cognitive impairment in individuals with
Parkinson disease
(PD). We tested this hypothesis using a highly validated and sensitive spatial memory task, spatial delayed response (SDR), and clinical and neuroimaging measures of PD asymmetry. We predicted SDR performance would be more impaired by PD-related changes in the right side of the brain than in the left. PD (n=35) and control (n=28) participants performed the SDR task. PD participants either had worse motor deficits on the right (RPD) or left (
LPD
) side of the body. Some participants also had magnetic resonance imaging for measurement of their substantia nigra (SN) volumes. The
LPD
group performed worse on the SDR task than the RPD and control groups. Right SN volume accounted for a unique and significant portion of the variance in SDR error, with smaller volume predicting poorer performance. In conclusion, left motor dysfunction and smaller right SN volume are associated with poorer spatial memory.
...
PMID:Motor asymmetry and substantia nigra volume are related to spatial delayed response performance in Parkinson disease. 1802 3
Spatial navigation is a complex process requiring integration of visuoperceptual information. The present study examined how visuospatial function relates to navigational veering in
Parkinson's disease
, a movement disorder in which visuospatial cognition is affected by the degeneration of the basal ganglia and resulting dysfunction of the parietal lobes. We hypothesized that patients whose initial motor symptoms start on the left versus right side of the body (
LPD
, predominant right-hemisphere dysfunction; RPD, predominant left-hemisphere dysfunction) would display distinct patterns of navigational veering associated with the groups' dissimilar visuospatial profiles. Of particular interest was to examine the association of navigational veering (lateral deviation along the medio-lateral axis) with perception of egocentric coordinates and of radial optic flow patterns, both of which are mediated by the parietal lobes. Thirty-one non-demented
Parkinson's disease
patients (16
LPD
, 15 RPD) and 18 healthy control (HC) adults received visuospatial tests, of whom 23
Parkinson's disease
patients and 17 HC also underwent veering assessment. The participants were examined on three visual-feedback navigation conditions: none (eyes closed), natural, and optic flow supplied by a virtual-reality headset. All groups veered to the left when walking with eyes closed, women with
Parkinson's disease
more so than the other participants. On the navigation assessments with visual feedback, only
LPD
patients deviated right of centre. On tests of visuospatial function, the perceived midline was shifted rightward in
LPD
(men and women), increasingly so with the addition of visual input. In contrast, men with RPD showed leftward deviation. RPD patients and HC perceived optic flow in the left hemifield as faster than in the right hemifield, with a trend for the opposite pattern for
LPD
. Navigational veering in
LPD
was associated with deviation of the perceived egocentric midline and not with perception of optic flow speed asymmetries, and in RPD it was also associated with visual dependence, though in fact
LPD
subjects were more visually dependent than those with RPD. Our results indicate that (i) parietal-mediated perception of visual space is affected in
Parkinson's disease
, with both side of motor symptom onset and gender affecting spatial performance, and (ii) visual input affects veering.
...
PMID:Impact of optic flow perception and egocentric coordinates on veering in Parkinson's disease. 1895 54
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