23 research outputs found

    Dual-task related gait changes after CSF tapping: a new way to identify idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus

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    BACKGROUND: Gait disturbances found in patients with idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus (iNPH) are unspecific to the diagnosis and commonly occur in neurodegenerative or vascular conditions (iNPH-like conditions). This current retrospective pre-post intervention study aims to determine whether changes in quantitative gait parameters during dual task condition differed between iNPH and iNPH-like conditions before and after cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) tapping. METHODS: 49 patients assessed before and after CSF tapping were included in this study (27 with iNPH and 22 with iNPH-like conditions). Gait analysis during single and dual task conditions (walking and backward counting) was performed before and after a CSF spinal tap of 40 ml. Gait parameters were compared between iNPH and iNPH-like conditions patients. Logistic regressions were used to examine the association between iNPH and gait parameters. RESULTS: Improvements of step width (−9.03 (20.75)% for iNPH group; +0.28 (21.76)% for iNPH-like conditions group), stride length (+7.82 (20.71)% for iNPH group; -0.62 (19.22)% for iNPH-like conditions group), walking speed (+12.20 (29.79)% for iNPH group; +2.38 (32.50)% for iNPH-like conditions group) and stance duration (−1.23 (4.03)% for iNPH group; +0.49 (5.12)% for iNPH-like conditions group) during dual task, after CSF spinal tapping, were significant in patients with iNPH compared to patients with iNPH-like conditions. No between group difference was observed for the single walking task evaluation. The multiple logistic regression revealed that among these four gait parameters, only the improvement in step width was associated with the diagnosis of iNPH. CONCLUSION: Dual-task related changes in spatio-temporal gait parameters before and after CSF tapping might be a novel and discriminative method of identifying iNPH patients from other similar conditions

    Parkinsonism is a Phenotypical Signature of Amyloidopathy in Patients with Gait Disorders

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    Central neurological gait abnormalities (CNGA) are frequently associated with parkinsonism in older adults. However, the neuropathological substrates and the clinical impact of parkinsonism have been not described in CNGA

    Walking while talking in patients with multiple sclerosis: the impact of specific cognitive loads

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    Gait and cognitive disorders are frequently reported in patients with multiple sclerosis, leading to decreased quality of live. The objective of this prospective study was to examine the impact of four specific cognitive tasks on gait in patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) with low disability

    Apathy and higher level of gait control in normal pressure hydrocephalus

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    Apathy represents the most common behavioral disturbance in patients with suspicion of idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus (iNPH) and has a major impact on quality of life. However, its impact on gait -the hallmark motor disturbance of iNPH - has never been studied yet. This study aims to evaluate the impact of apathy on higher level of gait control in patients with suspicion of iNPH. Stride time variability (STV), a marker of higher level of gait control, was quantified during usual walking (single task) and during walking while performing simultaneously cognitive tasks (dual task) of counting and verbal fluency. Among 46 patients with suspicion of iNPH (77.6±6.7years; 34.8% women), 30 (65.2%) presented apathy (defined by a score≥14 on the Starkstein apathy scale). Backward counting induced more important worsening of STV (i.e. increasing STV) in apathetic compared to non-apathetic patients (14.8±25.1% versus 9.0±20.4%; p=0.005), while both groups presented similar executive functioning. These findings suggest that apathy contributes to gait disorders in iNPH. Apathy is easy to monitor and should be considered as a target symptom of treatment

    Gait and physical impairments in patients with acute ankle sprains who did not receive physical therapy

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    To assess ankle function 4 weeks after conservative management and to examine the correlation of function with gait

    Dual-Task Assessment in Natalizumab-Treated Multiple Sclerosis Patients

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    Background: To study the 1-year evolution of quantitative dual-task gait parameters in comparison with single-task gait parameters and detailed neuropsychological assessment in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) treated with natalizumab. Methods: Walking speed, stride length and stride time during a dual task (walking while forward counting, backward counting, semantic fluency, and phonemic fluency), a single walking task, and a detailed neuropsychological assessment were prospectively measured and assessed twice at the 1-year interval in 9 consecutive patients with MS treated with natalizumab. Results: Dual-task-related gait changes (walking speed, stride length and stride time while performing semantic fluency and walking speed, and stride time while performing phonemic fluency) showed a significant improvement after 1 year of treatment with natalizumab. The single walking task and detailed neuropsychological assessment did not present any modification. Conclusions: Dual-task-related gait changes using a cognitive task with a specific executive demand represent an interesting marker of disease-modifying therapy in patients with MS. © 2014 S. Karger AG, Basel

    Apathy in idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus: A marker of reversible gait disorders

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    Apathy-the most common behavioral disturbance in idiopathic normal pressure hydrocephalus (iNPH)-is associated with poor gait, but the role of apathy on gait improvement after cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) tapping has not been studied yet. This study aims to compare gait improvement after CSF tapping in iNPH patients with and without apathy
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