How to assess motor impairment in writer's cramp.

Standard

How to assess motor impairment in writer's cramp. / Zeuner, Kirsten E; Peller, Martin; Knutzen, Arne; Holler, Iris; Münchau, Alexander; Hallett, Mark; Deuschl, Günther; Siebner, Hartwig R.

in: MOVEMENT DISORD, Jahrgang 22, Nr. 8, 8, 2007, S. 1102-1109.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Zeuner, KE, Peller, M, Knutzen, A, Holler, I, Münchau, A, Hallett, M, Deuschl, G & Siebner, HR 2007, 'How to assess motor impairment in writer's cramp.', MOVEMENT DISORD, Jg. 22, Nr. 8, 8, S. 1102-1109. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17230462?dopt=Citation>

APA

Zeuner, K. E., Peller, M., Knutzen, A., Holler, I., Münchau, A., Hallett, M., Deuschl, G., & Siebner, H. R. (2007). How to assess motor impairment in writer's cramp. MOVEMENT DISORD, 22(8), 1102-1109. [8]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17230462?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Zeuner KE, Peller M, Knutzen A, Holler I, Münchau A, Hallett M et al. How to assess motor impairment in writer's cramp. MOVEMENT DISORD. 2007;22(8):1102-1109. 8.

Bibtex

@article{4e366639e0ec4825bb18e85151bda004,
title = "How to assess motor impairment in writer's cramp.",
abstract = "Writer's cramp is a task-specific hand dystonia affecting handwriting. Clinical scores such as the Arm Dystonia Disability Scale (ADDS) or Writer's Cramp Rating Scale (WCRS) as well as kinematic analysis of handwriting movements have been used to assess functional impairment in affected patients. In 21 patients with writer's cramp and healthy controls, we analyzed the kinematics of writing and cyclic drawing movements. We rated the severity of dystonia using the ADDS and WCRS and correlated the clinical scores with movement kinematics. Mean stroke frequency was significantly reduced in dystonic patients. Drawing movements showed more frequently a decrease in stroke frequency than handwriting movements. During circle drawing, mean vertical peak velocity was more variable in patients relative to controls, indicating an impaired ability to reproduce the same kinematic pattern over time. An increase in vertical writing pressure was only observed during handwriting but not during circle drawing and may reflect a compensatory effort to stabilize the pencil. Kinematic measures and individual ADDS and WCRS scores did not correlate with each other. The lack of correlation is not surprising as ADDS, WCRS, and kinematic analysis probe different aspects of motor impairment. The ADDS characterizes how dystonia affects a set of fine manual tasks, whereas the WCRS scores the manifestation of dystonia during handwriting. Therefore, the clinical scores and kinematic analysis of handwriting provide complementary insights into motor impairment. Future studies need to address which combination of clinical scores and kinematic measures are most appropriate to quantify impairment in writer's cramp.",
author = "Zeuner, {Kirsten E} and Martin Peller and Arne Knutzen and Iris Holler and Alexander M{\"u}nchau and Mark Hallett and G{\"u}nther Deuschl and Siebner, {Hartwig R}",
year = "2007",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
pages = "1102--1109",
journal = "MOVEMENT DISORD",
issn = "0885-3185",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Inc.",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - How to assess motor impairment in writer's cramp.

AU - Zeuner, Kirsten E

AU - Peller, Martin

AU - Knutzen, Arne

AU - Holler, Iris

AU - Münchau, Alexander

AU - Hallett, Mark

AU - Deuschl, Günther

AU - Siebner, Hartwig R

PY - 2007

Y1 - 2007

N2 - Writer's cramp is a task-specific hand dystonia affecting handwriting. Clinical scores such as the Arm Dystonia Disability Scale (ADDS) or Writer's Cramp Rating Scale (WCRS) as well as kinematic analysis of handwriting movements have been used to assess functional impairment in affected patients. In 21 patients with writer's cramp and healthy controls, we analyzed the kinematics of writing and cyclic drawing movements. We rated the severity of dystonia using the ADDS and WCRS and correlated the clinical scores with movement kinematics. Mean stroke frequency was significantly reduced in dystonic patients. Drawing movements showed more frequently a decrease in stroke frequency than handwriting movements. During circle drawing, mean vertical peak velocity was more variable in patients relative to controls, indicating an impaired ability to reproduce the same kinematic pattern over time. An increase in vertical writing pressure was only observed during handwriting but not during circle drawing and may reflect a compensatory effort to stabilize the pencil. Kinematic measures and individual ADDS and WCRS scores did not correlate with each other. The lack of correlation is not surprising as ADDS, WCRS, and kinematic analysis probe different aspects of motor impairment. The ADDS characterizes how dystonia affects a set of fine manual tasks, whereas the WCRS scores the manifestation of dystonia during handwriting. Therefore, the clinical scores and kinematic analysis of handwriting provide complementary insights into motor impairment. Future studies need to address which combination of clinical scores and kinematic measures are most appropriate to quantify impairment in writer's cramp.

AB - Writer's cramp is a task-specific hand dystonia affecting handwriting. Clinical scores such as the Arm Dystonia Disability Scale (ADDS) or Writer's Cramp Rating Scale (WCRS) as well as kinematic analysis of handwriting movements have been used to assess functional impairment in affected patients. In 21 patients with writer's cramp and healthy controls, we analyzed the kinematics of writing and cyclic drawing movements. We rated the severity of dystonia using the ADDS and WCRS and correlated the clinical scores with movement kinematics. Mean stroke frequency was significantly reduced in dystonic patients. Drawing movements showed more frequently a decrease in stroke frequency than handwriting movements. During circle drawing, mean vertical peak velocity was more variable in patients relative to controls, indicating an impaired ability to reproduce the same kinematic pattern over time. An increase in vertical writing pressure was only observed during handwriting but not during circle drawing and may reflect a compensatory effort to stabilize the pencil. Kinematic measures and individual ADDS and WCRS scores did not correlate with each other. The lack of correlation is not surprising as ADDS, WCRS, and kinematic analysis probe different aspects of motor impairment. The ADDS characterizes how dystonia affects a set of fine manual tasks, whereas the WCRS scores the manifestation of dystonia during handwriting. Therefore, the clinical scores and kinematic analysis of handwriting provide complementary insights into motor impairment. Future studies need to address which combination of clinical scores and kinematic measures are most appropriate to quantify impairment in writer's cramp.

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

VL - 22

SP - 1102

EP - 1109

JO - MOVEMENT DISORD

JF - MOVEMENT DISORD

SN - 0885-3185

IS - 8

M1 - 8

ER -