Different conditions of gait ignition freezing, spontaneous freezing during walking and turning freezing on encountering obstacle will be investigated in fMRI study to examine whether different regions of brain will be involved under different conditions of freezing. We hypothesize that anterior cortical regions will engage in gait ignition failure, deep locomotion regions will be responsible for spontaneous freezing and schema regions will be involved in the generation of turning freezing on seeing the barrier. In the third part of the project, we will deliver a 5-day session of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) to the motor cortex of the FOG patients to examine whether the intervention will benefit the patients. Based on the signal source findings, we will investigate whether the possible tDCS beneficial effect will be different or similar in patients with different electric sources. In addition, how long the possible beneficial effect of tDCS can be consolidated after the 5-day course of stimulation is crucial and requires to be elucidated under the research project. We aim to peep the myth of FOG in PD by the multi-modality approach and hope the study will benefit the long suffering patients.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
20
A consecutive 5-days course of tDCS will be delivered. In treatment group, true stimulation will be administrated and sham stimulation will be delivered in control group.
China Medical University Hospital
Taichung, Taiwan
Change in laboratory gait analysis after the tDCS session
Variables in gait analysis:1.Gait initiation, 2.Level walking, 3.Turning, 4.Gait termination
Time frame: baseline to week 4
Change in Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) after the tDCS session
Time frame: baseline to week 4
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