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Proprioceptive recalibration following implicit visuomotor adaptation is preserved in Parkinson’s disease

Authors :
Alina G. Constantin
Erin K. Cressman
Howard Poizner
Robert Chen
Denise Y. P. Henriques
Danielle Salomonczyk
Antonio P. Strafella
Janis M. Miyasaki
Anthony E. Lang
Elena Moro
Susan H. Fox
Source :
Experimental Brain Research. 239:1551-1565
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Individuals with Parkinson's disease (PD) and healthy adults demonstrate similar levels of visuomotor adaptation provided that the distortion is small or introduced gradually, and hence, implicit processes are engaged. Recently, implicit processes underlying visuomotor adaptation in healthy individuals have been proposed to include proprioceptive recalibration (i.e., shifts in one's proprioceptive sense of felt hand position to match the visual estimate of their hand experienced during reaches with altered visual feedback of the hand). In the current study, we asked if proprioceptive recalibration is preserved in PD patients. PD patients tested during their "off" and "on" medication states and age-matched healthy controls reached to visual targets, while visual feedback of their unseen hand was gradually rotated 30° clockwise or translated 4 cm rightwards of their actual hand trajectory. As expected, PD patients and controls produced significant reach aftereffects, indicating visuomotor adaptation after reaching with the gradually introduced visuomotor distortions. More importantly, following visuomotor adaptation, both patients and controls showed recalibration in hand position estimates, and the magnitude of this recalibration was comparable between PD patients and controls. No differences for any measures assessed were observed across medication status (i.e., PD off vs PD on). Results reveal that patients are able to adjust their sensorimotor mappings and recalibrate proprioception following adaptation to a gradually introduced visuomotor distortion, and that dopaminergic intervention does not affect this proprioceptive recalibration. These results suggest that proprioceptive recalibration does not involve striatal dopaminergic pathways and may contribute to the preserved visuomotor adaptation that arises implicitly in PD patients.

Details

ISSN :
14321106 and 00144819
Volume :
239
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Experimental Brain Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fab1cee1e4968b4793df82204998aa2a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00221-021-06075-y