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Objective quantification of resting and activated parkinsonian rigidity:
a comparison of angular impulse and work scores.


The clinical assessment of rigidity is influenced by a number of variables
which limit the reproducibility of rating scores and the usefulness of
comparisons between subjects.

We evaluated an objective measure of rigidity which uses unpredictable but
reproducible limb perturbations mimicking the waveform, rate, and amplitude
of those used in the clinical examination; and evaluates total resistive
force, thus avoiding assumptions about the relative influence of elastic,
viscous, or inertial components of the measured resistive forces on the
genesis of rigidity.

We then used this measure to quantify the effects of an activation
procedure on parkinsonian
rigidity, because this forms an important but poorly understood part of the
routine clinical examination.

We studied 20 patients with a clinical diagnosis of Parkinson's disease and
10 age-matched control subjects.

A torque motor was used to deliver reproducible, transient, sinusoidal
perturbations varying between 1.0 and 1.5 Hz.

To quantify rigidity, we calculated angular impulse scores, which reflect
the relationship between change in total resistive torque and time.

Angular impulse scores were compared with work scores, which have
previously been found to correlate
with clinical assessments of rigidity.

All subjects were studied at rest and with activation.

Angular impulse scores were more consistently correlated with rigidity and
more clearly differentiated between patients and control subjects than work
scores.

Activation increased both clinical and objective rigidity scores; activated
angular impulse scores ranged from approximately 100%-200% of resting values.

When plotted against clinical rigidity scores, activated angular impulse
scores lay on a continuum with resting values.

We conclude that angular impulse is a valid objective measure of
parkinsonian rigidity.

Activation increases rigidity, but to varying degrees in different patients.

To improve the sensitivity and reproducibility of clinical rigidity
assessments, parkinsonian rating scales should include separate resting and
activated scores.


Fung VS, Burne JA, Morris JG
Mov Disord 2000 Jan;15(1):48-55
Department of Neurology, Westmead Hospital, Sydney, Australia.
PMID: 10634241, UI: 20097707

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PubMed/

janet paterson
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