Standardized handwriting to assess bradykinesia, micrographia and tremor in Parkinson's disease.

OBJECTIVE: To assess whether standardized handwriting can provide quantitative measures to distinguish patients diagnosed with Parkinson's disease from age- and gender-matched healthy control participants. DESIGN: Exploratory study. Pen tip trajectories were recorded during circle, spiral and l...

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Main Authors: Esther J Smits, Antti J Tolonen, Luc Cluitmans, Mark van Gils, Bernard A Conway, Rutger C Zietsma, Klaus L Leenders, Natasha M Maurits
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4031150?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-d848964e9a77413eb29b4a07d04b66f92020-11-24T21:58:27ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0195e9761410.1371/journal.pone.0097614Standardized handwriting to assess bradykinesia, micrographia and tremor in Parkinson's disease.Esther J SmitsAntti J TolonenLuc CluitmansMark van GilsBernard A ConwayRutger C ZietsmaKlaus L LeendersNatasha M MauritsOBJECTIVE: To assess whether standardized handwriting can provide quantitative measures to distinguish patients diagnosed with Parkinson's disease from age- and gender-matched healthy control participants. DESIGN: Exploratory study. Pen tip trajectories were recorded during circle, spiral and line drawing and repeated character 'elelelel' and sentence writing, performed by Parkinson patients and healthy control participants. Parkinson patients were tested after overnight withdrawal of anti-Parkinsonian medication. SETTING: University Medical Center Groningen, tertiary care, the Netherlands. PARTICIPANTS: Patients with Parkinson's disease (n = 10; mean age 69.0 years; 6 male) and healthy controls (n = 10; mean age 68.1 years; 6 male). INTERVENTIONS: Not applicable. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Movement time and velocity to detect bradykinesia and the size of writing to detect micrographia. A rest recording to investigate the presence of a rest-tremor, by frequency analysis. RESULTS: Mean disease duration in the Parkinson group was 4.4 years and the patients were in modified Hoehn-Yahr stages 1-2.5. In general, Parkinson patients were slower than healthy control participants. Median time per repetition, median velocity and median acceleration of the sentence task and median velocity of the elel task differed significantly between Parkinson patients and healthy control participants (all p<0.0014). Parkinson patients also wrote smaller than healthy control participants and the width of the 'e' in the elel task was significantly smaller in Parkinson patients compared to healthy control participants (p<0.0014). A rest-tremor was detected in the three patients who were clinically assessed as having rest-tremor. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows that standardized handwriting can provide objective measures for bradykinesia, tremor and micrographia to distinguish Parkinson patients from healthy control participants.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4031150?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Esther J Smits
Antti J Tolonen
Luc Cluitmans
Mark van Gils
Bernard A Conway
Rutger C Zietsma
Klaus L Leenders
Natasha M Maurits
spellingShingle Esther J Smits
Antti J Tolonen
Luc Cluitmans
Mark van Gils
Bernard A Conway
Rutger C Zietsma
Klaus L Leenders
Natasha M Maurits
Standardized handwriting to assess bradykinesia, micrographia and tremor in Parkinson's disease.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Esther J Smits
Antti J Tolonen
Luc Cluitmans
Mark van Gils
Bernard A Conway
Rutger C Zietsma
Klaus L Leenders
Natasha M Maurits
author_sort Esther J Smits
title Standardized handwriting to assess bradykinesia, micrographia and tremor in Parkinson's disease.
title_short Standardized handwriting to assess bradykinesia, micrographia and tremor in Parkinson's disease.
title_full Standardized handwriting to assess bradykinesia, micrographia and tremor in Parkinson's disease.
title_fullStr Standardized handwriting to assess bradykinesia, micrographia and tremor in Parkinson's disease.
title_full_unstemmed Standardized handwriting to assess bradykinesia, micrographia and tremor in Parkinson's disease.
title_sort standardized handwriting to assess bradykinesia, micrographia and tremor in parkinson's disease.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description OBJECTIVE: To assess whether standardized handwriting can provide quantitative measures to distinguish patients diagnosed with Parkinson's disease from age- and gender-matched healthy control participants. DESIGN: Exploratory study. Pen tip trajectories were recorded during circle, spiral and line drawing and repeated character 'elelelel' and sentence writing, performed by Parkinson patients and healthy control participants. Parkinson patients were tested after overnight withdrawal of anti-Parkinsonian medication. SETTING: University Medical Center Groningen, tertiary care, the Netherlands. PARTICIPANTS: Patients with Parkinson's disease (n = 10; mean age 69.0 years; 6 male) and healthy controls (n = 10; mean age 68.1 years; 6 male). INTERVENTIONS: Not applicable. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Movement time and velocity to detect bradykinesia and the size of writing to detect micrographia. A rest recording to investigate the presence of a rest-tremor, by frequency analysis. RESULTS: Mean disease duration in the Parkinson group was 4.4 years and the patients were in modified Hoehn-Yahr stages 1-2.5. In general, Parkinson patients were slower than healthy control participants. Median time per repetition, median velocity and median acceleration of the sentence task and median velocity of the elel task differed significantly between Parkinson patients and healthy control participants (all p<0.0014). Parkinson patients also wrote smaller than healthy control participants and the width of the 'e' in the elel task was significantly smaller in Parkinson patients compared to healthy control participants (p<0.0014). A rest-tremor was detected in the three patients who were clinically assessed as having rest-tremor. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows that standardized handwriting can provide objective measures for bradykinesia, tremor and micrographia to distinguish Parkinson patients from healthy control participants.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4031150?pdf=render
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