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1.
Journal of the Korean Academy of Rehabilitation Medicine ; : 110-113, 2010.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-724322

ABSTRACT

Organophosphate intoxication causing the extrapyramidal symptom is not frequent. A case of Parkinson's syndrome caused by organophosphate intoxication was observed, of which is reported with the quantitative measurement of tremor using Tri-axial accelerometry. A fifty nine year-old male was admitted to Wonju Christian Hospital after the intake of organophosphate for the purpose of suicide and three days after the accident, involuntary movements were detected. The encephalography and MRI showed no abnormality. With Tri-axial accelerometry, we detected less than 4 Hz resting tremor. The tremor did not response to L-dopa, and in the follow up examination performed 149 days after the accident, an increase in amplitude was detected. Gait disturbance and dysarticulation became more severe. In a case of the organophosphate intoxication patient, very rare Parkinson's syndrome findings were detected, and the tremor during the resting period was measured quantitatively by electromyography and Tri-axial accelerometry.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Accelerometry , Dyskinesias , Electromyography , Follow-Up Studies , Gait , Levodopa , Suicide , Tremor
2.
Journal of the Korean Academy of Rehabilitation Medicine ; : 495-500, 2005.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-722603

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The aims of this study were to assess intention tremor severity caused by brain injury using tri-axial accelerometry and also to determine the reliability and the correlation with clinical measurements. METHOD: Twenty two patients with intention tremor caused by brain injury were included. The quantitative measurement of tremor was performed using tri-axial accelerometry during finger to nose test. The dominant frequency and amplitude of tremor were acquired using Fast Fourier transformation analysis. The severity of tremor was also clinically rated by clinical rating scale for tremor, hand writing test, figure drawing test, pouring water test. The correlation between clinical measurement and tri-axial accelerometry measurement, and the inter-rater reliability were assessed. RESULTS: The tri-axial accelerometry measurement showed good inter-rater reliability. The mean dominant frequency was 3.10 Hz. The amplitudes at dominant frequency were significantly correlated with clinical rating scale for tremor, pouring water test (p<0.05) but not with hand writing test, figure drawing test. CONCLUSION: Quantitative measurement of intention tremor using tri-axial accelerometry may be very useful to assess the tremor severity caused by brain injury.


Subject(s)
Humans , Accelerometry , Brain Injuries , Brain , Fingers , Fourier Analysis , Hand , Intention , Nose , Tremor , Water , Writing
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