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Early
Recognition Of Parkinson's Disease
Specialists of the brain investigation department of the
Scientific Research Institute of Neurology, Russian Academy
of Medical Sciences, are developing methods for early
pre-clinical recognition of Parkinson's disease. The method
is based on the fact that even at early stages of the
disease, the patients' head, eye and hand movement parameters
change.
Parkinson's
disease is one of the most widespread neurodegenerative
diseases. It develops as a result of injuries of 60 to
80 percent of neurons in a single part of the brain. It
is important to find the way to "catch" the
disease before neuron degeneration reaches the critical
level, and the patient starts suffering from tremor and
movement disorders.
To
find reliable methods of early diagnostics, the Moscow
neurologists examined 12 healthy probationers and 16 patients
suffering from the first and the second stages of Parkinson's
disease. The participants to the experiment were tested
with the help of the hardware and software complex, which
analyzes the moving activity. The probationers were (by
moving the eyes only) to fix the look on the target, which
was shifting across at the angle of 40 degrees. They were
suggested to make sliding movements by the head to the
left and to the right along the horizontal plane, retaining
the look on the target, which moved synchronously with
the head movements. And, finally, after several open-eye
training sessions, the participants transferred the cursor
onto the target by memory, their eyes being curtained
off. These three tests allow to check how the patients
move separate parts of the body (only eyes, head or hand).
In the course of the fourth test, the probationers shifted
the cursor from one target to another by moving the eyes,
head and hand, i.e. by coordinating their movements.
At
the early stage of the disease, individual movements'
indices were changed with the patient, but these changes
differed slightly from the age standard. However, all
parameters of coordinated movement with Parkinson's disease
patients reliably differed from those of healthy probationers.
Apparently, at the early stage of the disease, the brain
is still able to impede the disease development and to
compensate for movement disorders. That is why, although
each individual movement occurs with a mistake, the mistake
is minimal, and it is not always possible to reveal it.
However, in case of coordinated movement all these minor
delays, inaccuracies in movements and multistage of movements
"superimpose" upon each other, and movement
disorders become evident.
The
researchers assume that it is the coordinated movement
disorder that can be considered as one of the markers
for early stage of Parkinson's disease. Analysis of such
disorders drastically increases the probability of early
disease recognition. Nevertheless, the authors of the
hypothesis emphasize that this is only a hypothesis so
far, and further experiments are need to verify it.
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/77484.php
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