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Gait initiation in children with Rett syndrome

Isaias, Ioannis Ugo; Dipaola, Mariangela; Michi, Marlies; Marzegan, Alberto; Volkmann, Jens; Rodocanachi Roidi, Marina L; Frigo, Carlo Albino; Cavallari, Paolo
Rett syndrome is an X-linked neurodevelopmental condition mainly characterized by loss of spoken language and a regression of purposeful hand use, with the development of distinctive hand stereotypies, and gait abnormalities. Gait initiation is the transition from quiet stance to steady-state condition of walking. The associated motor program seems to be centrally mediated and includes preparatory adjustments prior to any apparent voluntary movement of the lower limbs. Anticipatory postural adjustments contribute to postural stability and to create the propulsive forces necessary to reach steady-state gait at a predefined velocity and may be indicative of the effectiveness of the feedforward control of gait. In this study, we examined anticipatory postural adjustments associated with gait initiation in eleven girls with Rett syndrome and ten healthy subjects. Muscle activity (tibialis anterior and soleus muscles), ground reaction forces and body kinematic were recorded. Children with Rett syndrome showed a distinctive impairment in temporal organization of all phases of the anticipatory postural adjustments. The lack of appropriate temporal scaling resulted in a diminished impulse to move forward, documented by an impairment in several parameters describing the efficiency of gait start: length and velocity of the first step, magnitude and orientation of centre of pressure-centre of mass vector at the instant of (swing-)toe off. These findings were related to an abnormal muscular activation pattern mainly characterized by a disruption of the synergistic activity of antagonistic pairs of postural muscles. This study showed that girls with Rett syndrome lack accurate tuning of feedforward control of gait.
PMCID:3990480
PMID: 24743294
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 2912242

Dopaminergic striatal innervation predicts interlimb transfer of a visuomotor skill

Isaias, Ioannis U; Moisello, Clara; Marotta, Giorgio; Schiavella, Mauro; Canesi, Margherita; Perfetti, Bernardo; Cavallari, Paolo; Pezzoli, Gianni; Ghilardi, M Felice
We investigated whether dopamine influences the rate of adaptation to a visuomotor distortion and the transfer of this learning from the right to the left limb in human subjects. We thus studied patients with Parkinson disease as a putative in vivo model of dopaminergic denervation. Despite normal adaptation rates, patients showed a reduced transfer compared with age-matched healthy controls. The magnitude of the transfer, but not of the adaptation rate, was positively predicted by the values of dopamine-transporter binding of the right caudate and putamen. We conclude that striatal dopaminergic activity plays an important role in the transfer of visuomotor skills
PMCID:3212401
PMID: 21994362
ISSN: 1529-2401
CID: 142643

Factors predicting protracted improvement after pallidal DBS for primary dystonia: the role of age and disease duration

Isaias, Ioannis U; Volkmann, Jens; Kupsch, Andreas; Burgunder, Jean-Marc; Ostrem, Jill L; Alterman, Ron L; Mehdorn, Hubertus Maximilian; Schonecker, Thomas; Krauss, Joachim K; Starr, Philip; Reese, Rene; Kuhn, Andrea A; Schupbach, W M Michael; Tagliati, Michele
In many patients, optimal results after pallidal deep brain stimulation (DBS) for primary dystonia may appear over several months, possibly beyond 1 year after implant. In order to elucidate the factors predicting such protracted clinical effect, we retrospectively reviewed the clinical records of 44 patients with primary dystonia and bilateral pallidal DBS implants. Patients with fixed skeletal deformities, as well as those with a history of prior ablative procedures, were excluded. The Burke-Fahn-Marsden Dystonia Rating Scale (BFMDRS) scores at baseline, 1 and 3 years after DBS were used to evaluate clinical outcome. All subjects showed a significant improvement after DBS implants (mean BFMDRS improvement of 74.9% at 1 year and 82.6% at 3 years). Disease duration (DD, median 15 years, range 2-42) and age at surgery (AS, median 31 years, range 10-59) showed a significant negative correlation with DBS outcome at 1 and 3 years. A partition analysis, using DD and AS, clustered subjects into three groups: (1) younger subjects with shorter DD (n = 19, AS < 27, DD /= 27); (3) older subjects with longer DD (n = 17, DD > 17, AS >/= 27). Younger patients with short DD benefitted more and faster than older patients, who however continued to improve 10% on average 1 year after DBS implants. Our data suggest that subjects with short DD may expect to achieve a better general outcome than those with longer DD and that AS may influence the time necessary to achieve maximal clinical response.
PMID: 21365458
ISSN: 0340-5354
CID: 907472

Enhanced catecholamine transporter binding in the locus coeruleus of patients with early Parkinson disease [Historical Article]

Isaias, Ioannis U; Marotta, Giorgio; Pezzoli, Gianni; Sabri, Osama; Schwarz, Johannes; Crenna, Paolo; Classen, Joseph; Cavallari, Paolo
BACKGROUND: Studies in animals suggest that the noradrenergic system arising from the locus coeruleus (LC) and dopaminergic pathways mutually influence each other. Little is known however, about the functional state of the LC in patients with Parkinson disease (PD). METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed clinical and imaging data of 94 subjects with PD at an early clinical stage (Hoehn and Yahr stage 1-2) who underwent single photon computed tomography imaging with FP-CIT ([(1)(2)(3)I] N-omega-fluoropropyl-2beta-carbomethoxy-3beta-(4-iodophenyl) tropane). FP-CIT binding values from the patients were compared with 15 healthy subjects: using both a voxel-based whole brain analysis and a volume of interest analysis of a priori defined brain regions. RESULTS: Average FP-CIT binding in the putamen and caudate nucleus was significantly reduced in PD subjects (43% and 57% on average, respectively; p < 0.001). In contrast, subjects with PD showed an increased binding in the LC (166% on average; p < 0.001) in both analyses. LC-binding correlated negatively with striatal FP-CIT binding values (caudate: contralateral, rho = -0.28, p < 0.01 and ipsilateral rho = -0.26, p < 0.01; putamen: contralateral, rho = -0.29, p < 0.01 and ipsilateral rho = -0.29, p < 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: These findings are consistent with an up-regulation of noradrenaline reuptake in the LC area of patients with early stage PD, compatible with enhanced noradrenaline release, and a compensating activity for degeneration of dopaminergic nigrostriatal projections.
PMCID:3146819
PMID: 21777421
ISSN: 1471-2377
CID: 2209142

A 5-year prospective assessment of advanced Parkinson disease patients treated with subcutaneous apomorphine infusion or deep brain stimulation

Antonini, Angelo; Isaias, Ioannis U; Rodolfi, Giorgia; Landi, Andrea; Natuzzi, Francesca; Siri, Chiara; Pezzoli, Gianni
Prospective comparative long-term data on the effect of deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the subthalamic nucleus (STN) and continuous subcutaneous infusion of apomorphine (CSAI) in patients with advanced Parkinson disease (PD) are lacking. We report 5-year follow-up of 25 PD patients treated with either STN-DBS (n = 13) or CSAI (n = 12) who fulfilled CAPSIT-PD criteria. Cohorts were matched for disease duration and severity of motor complications. Baseline clinical and neuropsychological status did not differ among cohorts. Patients were assessed with the UPDRS, MMSE, HAMD-17 and Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI).Twelve subjects reached the 5-year follow-up with STN-DBS (one was lost at follow-up) versus two in the CSAI cohort. Drop-outs with CSAI were due to subcutaneous nodules (n = 2), insufficient control of motor fluctuations and dyskinesia (n = 4), death for unrelated reasons (n = 3) and one was lost at follow-up. Average apomorphine dose at last visit was 83.4 +/- 19.2 mg/day and average treatment duration was 30 months. At 1-year as well as at last follow-up (intention-to-treat analysis), both therapies decreased daily off-time but only STN-DBS reduced dyskinesia duration and severity. Decrement of medications was greater with STN-DBS. There was a significant worsening of NPI after STN-DBS, primarily because four subjects developed apathy.
PMID: 20972684
ISSN: 1432-1459
CID: 2209122

Pallidal deep brain stimulation for primary dystonia in children

Haridas, Abilash; Tagliati, Michele; Osborn, Irene; Isaias, Ioannis; Gologorsky, Yakov; Bressman, Susan B; Weisz, Donald; Alterman, Ron L
BACKGROUND: Deep brain stimulation (DBS) at the internal globus pallidus (GPi) has replaced ablative procedures for the treatment of primary generalized dystonia (PGD) because it is adjustable, reversible, and yields robust clinical improvement that appears to be long lasting. OBJECTIVE: To describe the long-term responses to pallidal DBS of a consecutive series of 22 pediatric patients with PGD. METHODS: Retrospective chart review of 22 consecutive PGD patients,
PMID: 21164379
ISSN: 0148-396x
CID: 907462

Parkinson's disease tremor-related metabolic network: characterization, progression, and treatment effects

Mure, Hideo; Hirano, Shigeki; Tang, Chris C; Isaias, Ioannis U; Antonini, Angelo; Ma, Yilong; Dhawan, Vijay; Eidelberg, David
The circuit changes that mediate parkinsonian tremor, while likely differing from those underlying akinesia and rigidity, are not precisely known. In this study, to identify a specific metabolic brain network associated with this disease manifestation, we used FDG PET to scan nine tremor dominant Parkinson's disease (PD) patients at baseline and during ventral intermediate (Vim) thalamic nucleus deep brain stimulation (DBS). Ordinal trends canonical variates analysis (OrT/CVA) was performed on the within-subject scan data to detect a significant spatial covariance pattern with consistent changes in subject expression during stimulation-mediated tremor suppression. The metabolic pattern was characterized by covarying increases in the activity of the cerebellum/dentate nucleus and primary motor cortex, and, to a less degree, the caudate/putamen. Vim stimulation resulted in consistent reductions in pattern expression (p<0.005, permutation test). In the absence of stimulation, pattern expression values (subject scores) correlated significantly (r=0.85, p<0.02) with concurrent accelerometric measurements of tremor amplitude. To validate this spatial covariance pattern as an objective network biomarker of PD tremor, we prospectively quantified its expression on an individual subject basis in independent PD populations. The resulting subject scores for this PD tremor-related pattern (PDTP) were found to exhibit: (1) excellent test-retest reproducibility (p<0.0001); (2) significant correlation with independent clinical ratings of tremor (r=0.54, p<0.001) but not akinesia-rigidity; and (3) significant elevations (p<0.02) in tremor dominant relative to atremulous PD patients. Following validation, we assessed the natural history of PDTP expression in early stage patients scanned longitudinally with FDG PET over a 4-year interval. Significant increases in PDTP expression (p<0.01) were evident in this cohort over time; rate of progression, however, was slower than for the PD-related akinesia/rigidity pattern (PDRP). We also determined whether PDTP expression is modulated by interventions specifically directed at parkinsonian tremor. While Vim DBS was associated with changes in PDTP (p<0.001) but not PDRP expression, subthalamic nucleus (STN) DBS reduced the activity of both networks (p<0.05). PDTP expression was suppressed more by Vim than by STN stimulation (p<0.05). These findings suggest that parkinsonian tremor is mediated by a distinct metabolic network involving primarily cerebello-thalamo-cortical pathways. Indeed, effective treatment of this symptom is associated with significant reduction in PDTP expression. Quantification of treatment-mediated changes in both PDTP and PDRP scores can provide an objective means of evaluating the differential effects of novel antiparkinsonian interventions on the different motor features of the disorder.
PMCID:2997135
PMID: 20851193
ISSN: 1053-8119
CID: 921812

A role for locus coeruleus in Parkinson tremor

Isaias, Ioannis U; Marzegan, Alberto; Pezzoli, Gianni; Marotta, Giorgio; Canesi, Margherita; Biella, Gabriele E M; Volkmann, Jens; Cavallari, Paolo
We analyzed rest tremor, one of the etiologically most elusive hallmarks of Parkinson disease (PD), in 12 consecutive PD patients during a specific task activating the locus coeruleus (LC) to investigate a putative role of noradrenaline (NA) in tremor generation and suppression. Clinical diagnosis was confirmed in all subjects by reduced dopamine reuptake transporter (DAT) binding values investigated by single photon computed tomography imaging (SPECT) with [(123)I] N-omega-fluoropropyl-2beta-carbomethoxy-3beta-(4-iodophenyl) tropane (FP-CIT). The intensity of tremor (i.e., the power of Electromyography [EMG] signals), but not its frequency, significantly increased during the task. In six subjects, tremor appeared selectively during the task. In a second part of the study, we retrospectively reviewed SPECT with FP-CIT data and confirmed the lack of correlation between dopaminergic loss and tremor by comparing DAT binding values of 82 PD subjects with bilateral tremor (n = 27), unilateral tremor (n = 22), and no tremor (n = 33). This study suggests a role of the LC in Parkinson tremor.
PMCID:3250076
PMID: 22287946
ISSN: 1662-5161
CID: 2209242

Night-time use of rotigotine in advanced Parkinson's disease

Canesi, Margherita; Mariani, Claudio B; Isaias, Ioannis U; Pezzoli, Gianni
Transdermal rotigotine was used in six patients with advanced Parkinson's disease and sleep disorders (UPDRS part II item 12 score >/= 2) receiving oral levodopa and diurnal apomorphine infusions. Transdermal rotigotine (2-4 mg/24h) was used at night for four months. Sleep disorders improved, the total Parkinson's Disease Sleep Scale score falling by an average of 45%; significant improvements emerged in the items quality of sleep and difficulty in remaining asleep (p<0.05). No undesirable dopaminergic effects were reported. This preliminary open-label study suggests that transdermal rotigotine may be a well tolerated and effective treatment in patients with advanced Parkinson's disease, reducing nocturnal disability and ameliorating sleep disorders without inducing undesirable dopaminergic effects.
PMID: 21388580
ISSN: 0393-5264
CID: 2209132

Imaging essential tremor

Isaias, Ioannis U; Marotta, Giorgio; Hirano, Shigeki; Canesi, Margherita; Benti, Riccardo; Righini, Andrea; Tang, Chengke; Cilia, Roberto; Pezzoli, Gianni; Eidelberg, David; Antonini, Angelo
To investigate over time changes in striatal dopamine transporter (DAT), we performed two sequential N-omega-fluoropropyl-2beta-carbomethoxy-3beta-(4-iodophenyl) tropane single photon computed tomography (SPECT) scans in 20 subjects with essential tremor (ET), in 13 with Parkinson disease (PD) and in 23 healthy controls (HC, one scan only). We also performed an [(99m)Tc]ethyl cysteinate dimer bicisate SPECT exam for regional brain network analysis in 9 ET, in a second group of 18 PD (9 with tremor, tPD and 9 akinetic-rigid dominant, arPD) and in 8 HC. PD subjects had a reduced DAT binding in comparison to ET and HC with an annual decline rate of 7.3% in the contralateral putamen. There were no mean uptake differences between ET and HC at baseline and no uptake loss over time in ET. A discriminant analysis grouped 30% (first scan) and 5% (second scan) of ET as PD and a partition analysis showed overlap between ET and PD for caudate nucleus uptake. Spatial covariance analysis revealed that the expression of the PD-related regional pattern separated both tPD and arPD from ET and HC. In conclusion, PD and ET do not share a common pattern of dopaminergic loss over time. However, mild impairment of dopamine transporter in the caudate nucleus may contribute to tremor onset in ET.
PMID: 20437537
ISSN: 0885-3185
CID: 921792