Supraspinal control of automatic postural responses in people with multiple sclerosis.

TitleSupraspinal control of automatic postural responses in people with multiple sclerosis.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsPeterson DS, Gera G, Horak FB, Fling BW
JournalGait Posture
Volume47
Pagination92-5
Date Published2016 06
ISSN1879-2219
KeywordsCase-Control Studies, Cerebral Cortex, Diffusion Tensor Imaging, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Multiple Sclerosis, Muscle, Skeletal, Pedunculopontine Tegmental Nucleus, Proprioception, Reaction Time, White Matter
Abstract

The neural underpinnings of delayed automatic postural responses in people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS) are unclear. We assessed whether white matter pathways of two supraspinal regions (the cortical proprioceptive Broadman's Area-3; and the balance/locomotor-related pedunculopontine nucleus) were related to delayed postural muscle response latencies in response to external perturbations. 19 PwMS (48.8±11.4years; EDSS=3.5 (range: 2-4)) and 12 healthy adults (51.7±12.2years) underwent 20 discrete, backward translations of a support surface. Onset latency of agonist (medial-gastrocnemius) and antagonist (tibialis anterior) muscles were assessed. Diffusion tensor imaging assessed white-matter integrity (i.e. radial diffusivity) of cortical proprioceptive and balance/locomotor-related tracts. Latency of the tibialis anterior, but not medial gastrocnemius was larger in PwMS than control subjects (p=0.012 and 0.071, respectively). Radial diffusivity of balance/locomotor tracts was higher (worse) in PwMS than control subjects (p=0.004), and was significantly correlated with tibialis (p=0.002), but not gastrocnemius (p=0.06) onset latency. Diffusivity of cortical proprioceptive tracts was not correlated with muscle onset. Lesions in supraspinal structures including the pedunculopontine nucleus balance/locomotor network may contribute to delayed onset of postural muscle activity in PwMS, contributing to balance deficits in PwMS.

DOI10.1016/j.gaitpost.2016.02.023
Alternate JournalGait Posture
PubMed ID27264410
PubMed Central IDPMC4899838
Grant ListI01 RX001075 / RX / RRD VA / United States
IK1 RX001480 / RX / RRD VA / United States
R01 AG006457 / AG / NIA NIH HHS / United States