Present pathophysiological concepts of bradykinesia stress an impairment of fast movements in Parkinson's disease. It is, however, unknown whether "bradykinetic" movements are different from slow movements of normal subjects. We recorded trajectories of unrestrained "natural" arm movements from normal subjects and patients with Parkinson's disease. The experiment required the execution of pointing movements for different movement distances and velocities. The shape of trajectories was found to be changed in Parkinson's disease. The steepness of the initial segment and the relation between steepness of the initial segment and final segment both exceeded corresponding values in normal subjects. An analysis of velocity profiles showed an impaired synchrony of vertical and horizontal velocity components. The difference from normal subjects increased with movement velocity. Parkinsonian patients suffered from a fundamental defect in the composition of complex sequences of motor programs required to perform natural arm movements.
How memorized visuo-spatial information influences motor control and whether this information is able to replace the feedback processing in cases of visual deprivation was studied using an unrestrained finger- and hand-movement paradigm. Nineteen right-handed subjects were asked to grasp and lift a small block with the index finger and thumb of the right hand, as quickly as possible. The efficiency of motor performance was analysed by measuring the grasping time derived from tangential velocity profiles of the fingertips. The data revealed significantly shorter grasping times under continuous visual guidance than during blind grasping. Grasping times increased under conditions with stepwise prolongation of visual deprivation time prior to the movement onset. The results support the general concept that within the first seconds of visual deprivation, stored visuo-spatial information can partly compensate for the lack of continuous visual feedback.
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