Relative Contributions of Balance and Voluntary Leg-Coordination Deficits to Cerebellar Gait Ataxia
- 1 April 2003
- journal article
- Published by American Physiological Society in Journal of Neurophysiology
- Vol. 89 (4) , 1844-1856
- https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00787.2002
Abstract
Different cerebellar regions participate in balance control and voluntary limb coordination, both of which might be important for normal bipedal walking. We wanted to determine the relative contributions of balance versus leg-coordination deficits to cerebellar gait ataxia in humans. We studied 20 subjects with cerebellar damage and 20 control subjects performing three tasks: a lateral weight-shifting task to measure balance, a visually guided stepping task to measure leg- coordination, and walking. We recorded three-dimensional joint position data during all tasks and center of pressure coordinates during weight-shifting. Each cerebellar subject was categorized as having no detectable deficits, a balance deficit only, a leg-placement deficit only, or both deficits. We then determined the walking abnormalities associated with each of these categories. Five of 10 measures of gait ataxia were abnormal in cerebellar subjects with a balance deficit, but only 1 was abnormal in cerebellar subjects with a leg-placement deficit. Furthermore, subjects with a balance deficit performed worse than subjects with a leg-placement deficit on 9 of the 10 gait measures. Finally, performance on the balance task, but not the leg-placement task, explained a significant proportion of the variance in walking speed for the entire cerebellar group. We conclude that balance deficits are more closely related to cerebellar gait ataxia than leg-placement deficits. Our findings are consistent with animal literature, which has suggested that cerebellar control of balance and gait are interrelated, and dissociable from cerebellar control of voluntary, visually guided limb movements.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Rhythmic neuronal activity in the lateral cerebellum of the cat during visually guided steppingThe Journal of Physiology, 1999
- Neuronal activity in the lateral cerebellum of the cat related to visual stimuli at rest, visually guided step modification, and saccadic eye movementsThe Journal of Physiology, 1998
- The cerebellum and control of rhythmical movementsTrends in Neurosciences, 1983
- Brainstem and spinal projections of the deep cerebellar nuclei in the monkey, with observations on the brainstem projections of the dorsal column nucleiBrain Research Reviews, 1983
- Anatomical evidence for segregated focal groupings of efferent cells and their terminal ramifications in the cerebellothalamic pathway of the monkeyBrain Research Reviews, 1983
- KINEMATIC EFFECTS OF DEAFFERENTATION AND CEREBELLAR ABLATIONBrain, 1976
- Functional Localization in the CerebellumA.M.A. Archives of Neurology & Psychiatry, 1955
- Functional localization in the cerebellum. I. Organization in longitudinal cortico‐nuclear zones and their contribution to the control of posture, both extrapyramidal and pyramidalJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1955
- Functional localization in the cerebellum of primates III. Lesions of hemispheres (neocerebellum)Journal of Comparative Neurology, 1938
- Functional localization in the cerebellum of primates II. Lesions of midline structures (vermis) and deep nucleiJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1938