Impaired tilt perception in Parkinson's disease: a central vestibular integration failure.

Impaired balance control is a hallmark symptom in Parkinson's disease (PD). Altered sensory-motor integration contributes to the deficiency. We aimed to determine whether impaired vestibular signal processing added to the disorder. We exposed patients (N = 11; 68±6y) and age-matched healthy sub...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Giovanni Bertolini, Andrea Wicki, Christian R Baumann, Dominik Straumann, Antonella Palla
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4398395?pdf=render
id doaj-3707f8819e534929895852d5cf5fd9b5
record_format Article
spelling doaj-3707f8819e534929895852d5cf5fd9b52020-11-25T00:57:17ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01104e012425310.1371/journal.pone.0124253Impaired tilt perception in Parkinson's disease: a central vestibular integration failure.Giovanni BertoliniAndrea WickiChristian R BaumannDominik StraumannAntonella PallaImpaired balance control is a hallmark symptom in Parkinson's disease (PD). Altered sensory-motor integration contributes to the deficiency. We aimed to determine whether impaired vestibular signal processing added to the disorder. We exposed patients (N = 11; 68±6y) and age-matched healthy subjects (hS: N = 19; 65±11y) on a motion platform in complete darkness to two consecutive forward tilt movements (12 series; N = 24; overall 288 trials) and asked them to indicate which tilt was perceived larger. By combing tilt movements with translations we manipulated vestibular sensory input in order to investigate whether putative impairment resulted from a deficiency of the sensory organs (semicircular canals in 'single-SCC-cue-condition', otoliths in 'single-OT-cue-condition') themselves or to a sensory integration failure ('multi-cue-condition').Tilt discrimination in the multi-cue-condition was inferior in patients compared to hS (p = 0.02). No significant differences between the two groups were found for both single-cue-conditions. Comparison of multi-cue-condition with a prediction resulting from the combination of both single-cue-conditions by optimal observer theory revealed that patients (p = 0.04), in contrast to hS, failed to efficiently combine SCC and OT information to improve tilt perception.We found that PD patients distinguished forward tilts less precise than hS, suggesting impaired vestibular perception. Tilt discrimination in patients, moreover, did not improve as much as in hS in conditions where both SCC and OT information was available compared to conditions where only SCC or OT cues were activated. The latter provides evidence that tilt misperception in PD most likely results from an integration failure of vestibular signals.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4398395?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Giovanni Bertolini
Andrea Wicki
Christian R Baumann
Dominik Straumann
Antonella Palla
spellingShingle Giovanni Bertolini
Andrea Wicki
Christian R Baumann
Dominik Straumann
Antonella Palla
Impaired tilt perception in Parkinson's disease: a central vestibular integration failure.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Giovanni Bertolini
Andrea Wicki
Christian R Baumann
Dominik Straumann
Antonella Palla
author_sort Giovanni Bertolini
title Impaired tilt perception in Parkinson's disease: a central vestibular integration failure.
title_short Impaired tilt perception in Parkinson's disease: a central vestibular integration failure.
title_full Impaired tilt perception in Parkinson's disease: a central vestibular integration failure.
title_fullStr Impaired tilt perception in Parkinson's disease: a central vestibular integration failure.
title_full_unstemmed Impaired tilt perception in Parkinson's disease: a central vestibular integration failure.
title_sort impaired tilt perception in parkinson's disease: a central vestibular integration failure.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Impaired balance control is a hallmark symptom in Parkinson's disease (PD). Altered sensory-motor integration contributes to the deficiency. We aimed to determine whether impaired vestibular signal processing added to the disorder. We exposed patients (N = 11; 68±6y) and age-matched healthy subjects (hS: N = 19; 65±11y) on a motion platform in complete darkness to two consecutive forward tilt movements (12 series; N = 24; overall 288 trials) and asked them to indicate which tilt was perceived larger. By combing tilt movements with translations we manipulated vestibular sensory input in order to investigate whether putative impairment resulted from a deficiency of the sensory organs (semicircular canals in 'single-SCC-cue-condition', otoliths in 'single-OT-cue-condition') themselves or to a sensory integration failure ('multi-cue-condition').Tilt discrimination in the multi-cue-condition was inferior in patients compared to hS (p = 0.02). No significant differences between the two groups were found for both single-cue-conditions. Comparison of multi-cue-condition with a prediction resulting from the combination of both single-cue-conditions by optimal observer theory revealed that patients (p = 0.04), in contrast to hS, failed to efficiently combine SCC and OT information to improve tilt perception.We found that PD patients distinguished forward tilts less precise than hS, suggesting impaired vestibular perception. Tilt discrimination in patients, moreover, did not improve as much as in hS in conditions where both SCC and OT information was available compared to conditions where only SCC or OT cues were activated. The latter provides evidence that tilt misperception in PD most likely results from an integration failure of vestibular signals.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4398395?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT giovannibertolini impairedtiltperceptioninparkinsonsdiseaseacentralvestibularintegrationfailure
AT andreawicki impairedtiltperceptioninparkinsonsdiseaseacentralvestibularintegrationfailure
AT christianrbaumann impairedtiltperceptioninparkinsonsdiseaseacentralvestibularintegrationfailure
AT dominikstraumann impairedtiltperceptioninparkinsonsdiseaseacentralvestibularintegrationfailure
AT antonellapalla impairedtiltperceptioninparkinsonsdiseaseacentralvestibularintegrationfailure
_version_ 1725224877380599808