Coordination of multi-joint arm movements in cerebellar ataxia: Analysis of hand and angular kinematics

Abstract Kinematic abnormalities of fast multijoint movements in cerebellar ataxia include abnormally increased curvature of hand trajectories and an increased hand path and are thought to originate from an impairment in generating appropriate levels of muscle torques to support normal coordination between shoulder and elbow joints. Such a mechanism predicts that kinematic abnormalities are pronounced when fast movements are performed and large muscular torques are required. Experimental evidence that systematically explores the effects of increasing movement velocities on movement kinematics in cerebellar multijoint movements is limited and to some extent contradictory. We, therefore, investigated angular and hand kinematics of natural multijoint pointing movements in patients with cerebellar degenerative disorders and healthy controls. Subjects performed self-paced vertical pointing movements with their right arms at three different target velocities. Limb movements were recorded in three-dimensional space using a two-camera infrared tracking system. Differences between patients and healthy subjects were most prominent when the subjects performed fast movements. Peak hand acceleration and deceleration were similar to normals during slow and moderate velocity movements but were smaller for fast movements. While altering movement velocities had little or no effect on the length of the hand path and angular motion of elbow and shoulder joints in normal subjects, the patients exhibited overshooting motions (hypermetria) of the hand and at both joints as movement velocity increased. Hypermetria at one joint always accompanied hypermetria at the neighboring joint. Peak elbow angular deceleration was markedly delayed in patients compared with normals. Other temporal movement variables such as the relative timing of shoulder and elbow joint motion onsets were normal in patients. Kinematic abnormalities of multijoint arm movements in cerebellar ataxia include hypermetria at both the elbow and the shoulder joint and, as a consequence, irregular and enlarged paths of the hand, and they are marked with fast but not with slow movements. Our findings suggest that kinematic movement abnormalities that characterize cerebellar limb ataxia are related to an impairment in scaling movement variables such as joint acceleration and deceleration normally with movement speed. Most likely, increased hand paths and decomposition of movement during slow movements, as described earlier, result from compensatory mechanisms the patients may employ if maximum movement accuracy is required.

[1]  G. Holmes THE SYMPTOMS OF ACUTE CEREBELLAR INJURIES DUE TO GUNSHOT INJURIES , 1917 .

[2]  G. Holmes THE CEREBELLUM OF MAN , 1939 .

[3]  J. Jackson A STUDY OF CONVULSIONS , 1970 .

[4]  M. Hallett,et al.  EMG analysis of patients with cerebellar deficits. , 1975, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[5]  J. Hore,et al.  Cerebellar participation in generation of prompt arm movements. , 1977, Journal of Neurophysiology.

[6]  J. Bloedel,et al.  Disorders of the cerebellum , 1981 .

[7]  M. R. Hashemi,et al.  A Synthetic Motor Control System; Possible Parallels With Transformations in Cerebellar Cortex , 1984 .

[8]  J. Hore,et al.  Movement and electromyographic disorders associated with cerebellar dysmetria. , 1986, Journal of neurophysiology.

[9]  Max Planck,et al.  THE CEREBELLUM AND THE PHYSICS OF MOVEMENT: SOME SPECULATIONS , 1987 .

[10]  H Hefter,et al.  Disturbances in human arm movement trajectory due to mild cerebellar dysfunction. , 1990, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[11]  H. Freund,et al.  Coordination of a Multi-Joint Movement in Normal Humans and in Patients with Cerebellar Dysfunction , 1990, Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences / Journal Canadien des Sciences Neurologiques.

[12]  J. Hore,et al.  Cerebellar dysmetria at the elbow, wrist, and fingers. , 1991, Journal of neurophysiology.

[13]  M. Hallett,et al.  Physiological analysis of simple rapid movements in patients with cerebellar deficits. , 1991, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[14]  W T Thach,et al.  The cerebellum and the adaptive coordination of movement. , 1992, Annual review of neuroscience.

[15]  H. Diener,et al.  Pathophysiology of cerebellar ataxia , 1992, Movement disorders : official journal of the Movement Disorder Society.

[16]  J. Hore,et al.  Cerebellar Dysfunction of Movement and Perception , 1993, Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences / Journal Canadien des Sciences Neurologiques.

[17]  M. Hallett,et al.  Physiologic studies of dysmetria in patients with cerebellar deficits. , 1993, The Canadian journal of neurological sciences. Le journal canadien des sciences neurologiques.

[18]  A. Harding Clinical features and classification of inherited ataxias. , 1993, Advances in neurology.

[19]  Harding Ae Clinical features and classification of inherited ataxias. , 1993, Advances in neurology.

[20]  W. T. Thach,et al.  Preserved Simple and Impaired Compound Movement After Infarction in the Territory of the Superior Cerebellar Artery , 1993, Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences / Journal Canadien des Sciences Neurologiques.

[21]  Clinical and imaging correlations in inherited ataxias. , 1993, Advances in neurology.

[22]  J Jacquy,et al.  Detection of silent cerebellar lesions by increasing the inertial load of the moving hand , 1995, Annals of neurology.

[23]  W. T. Thach,et al.  Cerebellar ataxia: abnormal control of interaction torques across multiple joints. , 1996, Journal of neurophysiology.

[24]  J. Dichgans,et al.  Acceleration deficit in patients with cerebellar lesions. A study of kinematic and EMG-parameters in fast wrist movements , 1996, Brain Research.

[25]  M Hallett,et al.  Kinematics of Initiating a Two-Joint Arm Movement in Patients with Cerebellar Ataxia , 1996, Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences / Journal Canadien des Sciences Neurologiques.