J Mov Disord.  2018 Jan;11(1):35-44. 10.14802/jmd.17046.

Quantitative Assessment of Hand Dysfunction in Patients with Early Parkinson's Disease and Focal Hand Dystonia

Affiliations
  • 1Neurophysiology Laboratory, Department of Neurological Sciences, Christian Medical College, Vellore, India. srinivas@cmcvellore.ac.in
  • 2Neurology Division, Department of Neurological Sciences, Christian Medical College, Vellore, India.
  • 3Neurosurgery Division, Department of Neurological Sciences, Christian Medical College, Vellore, India.
  • 4Department of Biostatistics, Christian Medical College, Vellore, India.

Abstract


OBJECTIVE
Motor impairments related to hand function are common symptoms in patients with movement disorders, such as Parkinson's disease (PD) and focal hand dystonia (FHD). However, hand dysfunction has not been quantitatively assessed as a clinical tool for screening patient groups from healthy controls (HCs). The aim of our study was 1) to quantitatively assess hand dysfunction in patients with PD and FHD and its usefulness as a screening tool 2) to grade disease severity in PD and FHD based on hand dysfunction.
METHODS
The current case-control study included HCs (n = 50) and patients with known history of PD (n = 25) or FHD (n = 16). Hand function was assessed by a precision grip task while participants lifted objects of 1.3 N and 1.7 N under dry skin conditions, followed by very wet skin conditions (VWSCs). Receiver operating characteristic and summative scoring analyses were performed.
RESULTS
In PD, the combination of loading phase duration and lifting phase duration at quantitative cutoffs of 0.36 and 0.74 seconds identified 21/25 patients as diseased and 49/50 subjects as HCs with 1.7 N under VWSCs. In PD, 5/21 was graded as "mild" and 16/21 as "moderate cases." In FHD, slip force at a cutoff of 1.2 N identified 13/16 patients as diseased and 41/50 subjects as HC with 1.7 N under VWSCs, but disease severity could not be graded.
CONCLUSION
Our results demonstrate the use of precision grip task as an important clinical tool in assessment of hand dysfunction in movement disorder patients. Use of quantitative cutoffs may improve diagnostic accuracy and serve as a valuable adjunct to existing clinical assessment methods.

Keyword

Parkinson's; focal hand dystonia; precision grip; hand dysfunction; loading phase duration; lifting phase duration; slip force

MeSH Terms

Case-Control Studies
Dystonia*
Hand Strength
Hand*
Humans
Lifting
Mass Screening
Movement Disorders
Parkinson Disease*
ROC Curve
Skin
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