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Motor imagery vividness and symptom severity in Parkinson's disease

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Motor imagery vividness and symptom severity in Parkinson's disease. / Readman, Megan; Crawford, Trevor; Linkenauger, Sally et al.
In: Journal of Neuropsychology, Vol. 17, No. 1, 31.03.2023, p. 180-192.

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Readman M, Crawford T, Linkenauger S, Bek J, Poliakoff E. Motor imagery vividness and symptom severity in Parkinson's disease. Journal of Neuropsychology. 2023 Mar 31;17(1):180-192. Epub 2022 Oct 13. doi: 10.1111/jnp.12293

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@article{fcf874ba1ab446febaf6c084f036dbd0,
title = "Motor imagery vividness and symptom severity in Parkinson's disease",
abstract = "Motor imagery (MI), the mental simulation of movement in the absence of overt motor output, has demonstrated potential as a technique to support rehabilitation of movement in neurological conditions such as Parkinson's disease (PD). Existing evidence suggests that MI is largely preserved in PD, but previous studies have typically examined global measures of MI and have not considered the potential impact of individual differences in symptom presentation on MI. The present study investigated the influence of severity of overall motor symptoms, bradykinesia and tremor on MI vividness scores in 44 individuals with mild to moderate idiopathic PD. Linear mixed effects modelling revealed that imagery modality and the severity of left side bradykinesia significantly influenced MI vividness ratings. Consistent with previous findings, participants rated visual motor imagery (VMI) to be more vivid than kinesthetic motor imagery (KMI). Greater severity of left side bradykinesia (but not right side bradykinesia) predicted increased vividness of KMI, while tremor severity and overall motor symptom severity did not predict vividness of MI. The specificity of the effect of bradykinesia to the left side may reflect greater premorbid vividness for the dominant (right) side or increased attention to more effortful movements on the left side of the body resulting in more vivid motor imagery.",
keywords = "bradykinesia, kinesthetic imagery, motor imagery, Parkinson's disease, visual imagery",
author = "Megan Readman and Trevor Crawford and Sally Linkenauger and Judith Bek and Ellen Poliakoff",
year = "2023",
month = mar,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1111/jnp.12293",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "180--192",
journal = "Journal of Neuropsychology",
issn = "1748-6653",
publisher = "Wiley",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Motor imagery vividness and symptom severity in Parkinson's disease

AU - Readman, Megan

AU - Crawford, Trevor

AU - Linkenauger, Sally

AU - Bek, Judith

AU - Poliakoff, Ellen

PY - 2023/3/31

Y1 - 2023/3/31

N2 - Motor imagery (MI), the mental simulation of movement in the absence of overt motor output, has demonstrated potential as a technique to support rehabilitation of movement in neurological conditions such as Parkinson's disease (PD). Existing evidence suggests that MI is largely preserved in PD, but previous studies have typically examined global measures of MI and have not considered the potential impact of individual differences in symptom presentation on MI. The present study investigated the influence of severity of overall motor symptoms, bradykinesia and tremor on MI vividness scores in 44 individuals with mild to moderate idiopathic PD. Linear mixed effects modelling revealed that imagery modality and the severity of left side bradykinesia significantly influenced MI vividness ratings. Consistent with previous findings, participants rated visual motor imagery (VMI) to be more vivid than kinesthetic motor imagery (KMI). Greater severity of left side bradykinesia (but not right side bradykinesia) predicted increased vividness of KMI, while tremor severity and overall motor symptom severity did not predict vividness of MI. The specificity of the effect of bradykinesia to the left side may reflect greater premorbid vividness for the dominant (right) side or increased attention to more effortful movements on the left side of the body resulting in more vivid motor imagery.

AB - Motor imagery (MI), the mental simulation of movement in the absence of overt motor output, has demonstrated potential as a technique to support rehabilitation of movement in neurological conditions such as Parkinson's disease (PD). Existing evidence suggests that MI is largely preserved in PD, but previous studies have typically examined global measures of MI and have not considered the potential impact of individual differences in symptom presentation on MI. The present study investigated the influence of severity of overall motor symptoms, bradykinesia and tremor on MI vividness scores in 44 individuals with mild to moderate idiopathic PD. Linear mixed effects modelling revealed that imagery modality and the severity of left side bradykinesia significantly influenced MI vividness ratings. Consistent with previous findings, participants rated visual motor imagery (VMI) to be more vivid than kinesthetic motor imagery (KMI). Greater severity of left side bradykinesia (but not right side bradykinesia) predicted increased vividness of KMI, while tremor severity and overall motor symptom severity did not predict vividness of MI. The specificity of the effect of bradykinesia to the left side may reflect greater premorbid vividness for the dominant (right) side or increased attention to more effortful movements on the left side of the body resulting in more vivid motor imagery.

KW - bradykinesia

KW - kinesthetic imagery

KW - motor imagery

KW - Parkinson's disease

KW - visual imagery

U2 - 10.1111/jnp.12293

DO - 10.1111/jnp.12293

M3 - Journal article

VL - 17

SP - 180

EP - 192

JO - Journal of Neuropsychology

JF - Journal of Neuropsychology

SN - 1748-6653

IS - 1

ER -