Primary orthostatic tremor is an exaggeration of a physiological response to instability
- 14 October 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Movement Disorders
- Vol. 18 (2) , 195-199
- https://doi.org/10.1002/mds.10324
Abstract
Primary orthostatic tremor (POT) is a rare disorder characterised by an intense sense of unsteadiness upon standing and a 16-Hz tremor in which the timing between tremor bursts in different muscles (unilateral and bilateral) remains constant. Hitherto, similar EMG activity has not been described in healthy subjects and it has been postulated that the oscillations seen in POT are primarily pathological. In this study, EMG was recorded from tibialis anterior in healthy subjects who were made unsteady through vestibular galvanic stimulation or leaning backwards. Under these conditions, a peak at approximately 16 Hz was seen in the coherence between the left and right tibialis anterior. This bilateral coherence was absent when the subjects activated the same muscles when not unsteady. These data indicate the existence of a physiological system involved in organising postural responses under circumstances of imbalance and characterised by a highly synchronised output at approximately 16 Hz. In addition, the results suggest that the core abnormality in POT may be an exaggerated sense of unsteadiness when standing still, which then elicits activity from a 16-Hz oscillator normally engaged in postural responses. © 2002 Movement Disorder SocietyKeywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Fast orthostatic tremor in Parkinson's disease mimicking primary orthostatic tremor.Movement Disorders, 2001
- The pathophysiology of tremorMuscle & Nerve, 2001
- Orthostatic tremor arises from an oscillator in the posterior fossaMovement Disorders, 2001
- A positron emission tomography study of primary orthostatic tremorNeurology, 1996
- New clinical sign for orthostatic tremorThe Lancet, 1995
- A framework for the analysis of mixed time series/point process data—Theory and application to the study of physiological tremor, single motor unit discharges and electromyogramsProgress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology, 1995
- Orthostatic tremor: Clinical and electrophysiologic characteristicsMuscle & Nerve, 1993
- The frequency content of common synaptic inputs to motoneurones studied during voluntary isometric contraction in man.The Journal of Physiology, 1993
- Orthostatic TremorArchives of Neurology, 1984