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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (
tremor
)
18,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Background: Festinating gait (FSG) was first associated with parkinsonism by Sir James Parkinson, in his original essay on "The
Shaking
Palsy". Its frequency and relation to other parkinsonian features have never been assessed.Objective: To study the relationships between gait festination and other parkinsonian clinical features among patients with Parkinson's disease (PD).Method: During an open lecture to patients with PD who are followed at the Movement Disorders Unit (MDU) of
Tel
-Aviv Sourasky Medical Center one of us explained verbally and imitated festinating gait on stage. All attending patients with the help of their care-givers or family members, were asked to answer two written questions regarding their own experience with FSG as well as the degree of disability it causes. Clinical information about each patient was taken from his/her chart at the MDU and missing data was completed during the next office visit or from the family physician. Statistical analysis was performed using t-tests for comparison between groups, Chochran-Armitage test for trends and logistic regression to assess the contribution of age of onset, disease duration and disease severity to the development of FSG.Results: Eighty-one PD patients (58 males, mean age 67.5+/-10.7years) answered the FSG questionnaire. Our study population's mean disease duration was 8.5+/-6.4years, mean Hoehn and Yahr (H&Y) clinical stage of 2.6+/-0.8 and mean levodopa dose of 608+/-375mg/day (15 patients were not on levodopa). Twenty-six patients (32.1%) experienced FSG during the previous month and 56% of them reported that FSG was a significant and disabling symptom. FSG was strongly associated with higher stage of H&Y (p<0.001) with a significant trend as the disease progresses (p=0.001) but not with total score in the motor part of the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS). Longer disease duration was the only clinical factor, which was found to be associated with FSG in the multivariate model. Thirty seven percent (37%) of the patients with FSG reported frequent falls with association between occasional or frequent falls, as reported on the activity of daily living (ADL) part of the UPDRS, and the presence of FSG (p<0.08). There was no association between significant postural reflex abnormalities as rated on the objective part of the UPDRS and the presence of FSG. There was a significant association between the presence of freezing of gait (FOG) as reported in the ADL part of the UPDRS and the presence of FSG (p<0.001) as well as a significant trend towards more frequent FSG in patients with more severe FOG (p<0.001).Conclusion: FSG was clearly associated with longer duration of PD symptoms but not with disease severity as reflected in the motor part of the UPDRS. The relationships between FSG and postural reflexes abnormalities is unclear but it is frequently associated with falls and freezing of gait.
...
PMID:Gait festination in Parkinson's disease. 1124 95
In this study, we apply a multidisciplinary approach to investigate falls in PD patients using clinical, demographic and neuroimaging data from two independent initiatives (University of Michigan and
Tel
Aviv Sourasky Medical Center). Using machine learning techniques, we construct predictive models to discriminate fallers and non-fallers. Through controlled feature selection, we identified the most salient predictors of patient falls including gait speed, Hoehn and Yahr stage, postural instability and gait difficulty-related measurements. The model-based and model-free analytical methods we employed included logistic regression, random forests, support vector machines, and XGboost. The reliability of the forecasts was assessed by internal statistical (5-fold) cross validation as well as by external out-of-bag validation. Four specific challenges were addressed in the study: Challenge 1, develop a protocol for harmonizing and aggregating complex, multisource, and multi-site Parkinson's disease data; Challenge 2, identify salient predictive features associated with specific clinical traits, e.g., patient falls; Challenge 3, forecast patient falls and evaluate the classification performance; and Challenge 4, predict
tremor
dominance (TD) vs. posture instability and gait difficulty (PIGD). Our findings suggest that, compared to other approaches, model-free machine learning based techniques provide a more reliable clinical outcome forecasting of falls in Parkinson's patients, for example, with a classification accuracy of about 70-80%.
...
PMID:Model-based and Model-free Machine Learning Techniques for Diagnostic Prediction and Classification of Clinical Outcomes in Parkinson's Disease. 2974 58
For years there has been much speculation surrounding the abandonment of the Middle Bronze Age IIB palace of
Tel
Kabri, ca. 1700 BCE. There are no weapons, hoards of money and jewelry, or visible evidence for fire, which rules out hostile attack or conquest. There are also no indications of drought or environmental degradation that might have forced the inhabitants to vacate the site, nor mass graveyards to indicate a pandemic. The current study uses micro-geoarchaeological methods to show that the demise of the palace was rapid, with walls and ceilings collapsing at once prior to abandonment. Macroscopic data (stratigraphic and structural) from five excavation seasons were reexamined, showing that at least nine Potential Earthquake Archaeological Effects (PEAEs) are found and associated with the last occupation phase of the site's palace. All lines of evidence point to the possibility that an earthquake damaged the palace, possibly to a point where it was no longer economically viable to repair. This conclusion is compounded by the discovery of a 1-3 m wide trench that cuts through the palace for 30 m, which may be the result of ground
shaking
or liquefaction caused by an earthquake. This study shows the importance of combining macro- and micro-archaeological methods for the identification of ancient earthquakes, together with the need to evaluate alternative scenarios of climatic, environmental, and economic collapse, as well as human-induced destruction before a seismic event scenario can be proposed.
...
PMID:Earthquake damage as a catalyst to abandonment of a Middle Bronze Age settlement: Tel Kabri, Israel. 3291 9