4.6 Article

A Critical Investigation of Cerebellar Associative Learning in Isolated Dystonia

Journal

MOVEMENT DISORDERS
Volume 37, Issue 6, Pages 1187-1192

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mds.28967

Keywords

dystonia; eyeblink conditioning; cerebellum; associative learning

Funding

  1. Chadburn Clinical Lectureship in Medicine
  2. Royal Society

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study aimed to examine the influence of dystonia on eyeblink conditioning and explore its relationship with sex, age, and dystonia subtypes. The results showed that isolated dystonia and its subtypes had similar eyeblink conditioning levels compared to the control group, and a wide range of variability was observed in both healthy individuals and dystonia patients. This finding suggests that there is no global cerebellar learning deficit in isolated dystonia.
Background Impaired eyeblink conditioning is often cited as evidence for cerebellar dysfunction in isolated dystonia yet the results from individual studies are conflicting and underpowered. Objective To systematically examine the influence of dystonia, dystonia subtype, and clinical features over eyeblink conditioning within a statistical model which controlled for the covariates age and sex. Methods Original neurophysiological data from all published studies (until 2019) were shared and compared to an age- and sex-matched control group. Two raters blinded to participant identity rescored all recordings (6732 trials). After higher inter-rater agreement was confirmed, mean conditioning per block across raters was entered into a mixed repetitive measures model. Results Isolated dystonia (P = 0.517) and the subtypes of isolated dystonia (cervical dystonia, DYT-TOR1A, DYT-THAP1, and focal hand dystonia) had similar levels of eyeblink conditioning relative to controls. The presence of tremor did not significantly influence levels of eyeblink conditioning. A large range of eyeblink conditioning behavior was seen in both health and dystonia and sample size estimates are provided for future studies. Conclusions The similarity of eyeblink conditioning behavior in dystonia and controls is against a global cerebellar learning deficit in isolated dystonia. Precise mechanisms for how the cerebellum interplays mechanistically with other key neuroanatomical nodes within the dystonic network remains an open research question. (c) 2022 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson Movement Disorder Society.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available