ISRN Neurol. 2012;2012:320607. Epub 2012 Aug 5.
Güler S, Bir LS, Akdag B, Ardıc F.
Source
Department of Neurology, Faculty of Medicine, Trakya University, 22030 Edirne, Turkey.
Abstract
The
aim of this study was to determine balance problems and severity and
ratio of postural instability of newly diagnosed, early stage
Parkinson's patients who did not receive any antiparkinson treatment
before, to evaluate fall risk clinically and posturographically and to
examine the effects of pramipexole on these signs and symptoms.
Detailed posturographic assessments which involved central vestibular,
visual, peripheric vestibular somatosensory field tests were applied to
both patient and control subjects and fall risk was determined. There
was not statistically significant difference between patients and
control subjects before and after drug therapy in the assesment of fall
risk in posturography and there was not any improvement with drug usage
in the patient group. However, in the analysis of subsystems
separately, only the involvement in central vestibular field was more
severe and could appear at all positions in Parkinson's patients
comparing with the control group, and pramipexole was partially
effective in improving this disorder. Central vestibular field is the
subsystem that should be examined with first priority. Posturography is
relatively reliable in defining fall risk and postural instability
ratio in Parkinson's disease. But it should be considered that clinical
assessment tools can be more sensitive in the evaluation of balance and
postural disorders and in the follow-up of the response to drug therapy.
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