Power‐law temporal autocorrelation of activity reflects severity of parkinsonism
- 27 April 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Movement Disorders
- Vol. 22 (9) , 1308-1313
- https://doi.org/10.1002/mds.21527
Abstract
We aimed to obtain a reliable, objective scale representing disease severity for appropriate management of patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). Nineteen patients with PD at the Department of Neurology, Tokyo University Hospital, were classified into mild (n = 10) or severe groups (n = 9) depending on their Hoehn‐Yahr scores, and wore accelerometers on their wrists for more than 6 consecutive days. During this time we monitored their subjective assessments of symptom severity and analyzed the power‐law exponents (α) for local maxima and minima of fluctuations in the activity time series. Statistical comparisons were made between the severe and mild groups and of individual patients on “good condition” and “bad condition” days, as well as between days before and after antiparkinsonism medication. In all patients, the α for local maxima was always lower when parkinsonism was mild than when severe. Presence of tremor did not influence the α for local maxima. As the lower α value for local maxima of fluctuations in activity records reflects more frequent switching behavior from low to high physical activities or the severity of akinesia, actigraph monitoring of parkinsonism, and analysis of its power‐law correlation may provide useful objective information for controlling parkinsonism in outpatient clinics and for evaluating new antiparkinsonism drugs. © 2007 Movement Disorder SocietyKeywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- New actigraph for long-term tremor recordingMovement Disorders, 2006
- Aging of Complex Heart Rate DynamicsIEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 2005
- Noisy vestibular stimulation improves autonomic and motor responsiveness in central neurodegenerative disordersAnnals of Neurology, 2005
- scaling in heart rate requires antagonistic autonomic controlPhysical Review E, 2004
- Fractal dynamics of body motion in patients with Parkinson's diseaseJournal of Neural Engineering, 2004
- Asymmetrical singularities in real-world signalsPhysical Review E, 2003
- Quantitative rest activity in ambulatory monitoring as a physiological marker of restless legs syndrome: A controlled studyMovement Disorders, 2003
- A new actigraph for long-term registration of the duration and intensity of tremor and movementIEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 1998
- Circadian rest—activity rhythm disturbances in alzheimer's diseaseBiological Psychiatry, 1996
- Unified Parkinson's disease rating scale characteristics and structureMovement Disorders, 1994