Brain Diseases and Disorders
11
fine movements, slowing down or slowing down of all movements, especially
walking, bending the body forward. These symptoms start insidiously and
progress slowly. A decrease in the sense of smell or shoulder pain may be one
of the first symptoms that go unnoticed. Over time, rigidity and bradykinesia
become evident and postural changes begin to occur. The patient’s mobility
gradually decreases as a result of decreased trunk rotation, arm swing during
walking, disappearance of spontaneous facial expressions, and increasing diffi-
culty initiating movement [60]. Another symptom is a form of freezing akinesia
known as a motor block, which is characterized by an abrupt, transient (less
than 10 seconds) immobility, primarily affecting the legs when walking. This
causes anxiety when the patient first starts to walk and makes it difficult to
move quickly when turning, crossing, or getting through tight spaces, which
can lead to falls.
Bradykinesia is the most common sign of the diseases affecting the basal
ganglia. It is characterized by trouble with movement-based activities includ-
ing coordination, purposeful movement initiation, direction changes, halting,
switching between movements, and simultaneous performance of two move-
ments. Activities and reaction times generally slow down, particularly in the
case of handling the sophisticated technologies. The clinical signs of bradyki-
nesia includes spontaneous cessation of movement, dribbling from the mouth
due to difficulties in swallowing, monotone and hypokinetic dysarthria, loss
of facial expression, decreased blinking, and decreased arm swing while walk-
ing. It can be easily detected by rapid, repetitive, and alternating movements
of the extremities in neurological examination. The degree of bradykinesia is
linked to a shortfall in dopamine and is considered to be the consequence of a
reduction in the dopaminergic activity leading to a decrease in activation of
the motor cortex, premotor cortex, and supplementary motor cortex [61].
The term “rigidity” describes the rise in muscular tone due to simultaneous
antagonist and agonist muscle contractions. The voluntary movement of the
opposing limb, commonly referred to as the “froment maneuver,” enhances
rigidity; this strengthening effect is crucial for exposing moderate rigidity
[62]. Postural instability is a condition that develops after other PD signs and
symptoms. It is the weakening or loss of postural reflexes, which ordinarily
automatically maintain the body position taken while standing or sitting in
healthy individuals. In contrast, patients struggle to get up from their sit-
ting positions without assistance due to postural instability. PD patients fre-
quently experience balance issues, falls, and especially backward falls. Postural
instability is also closely linked to other parkinsonian symptoms, orthostatic
hypotension, age-related sensory alterations, and kinesthetic impairments in
the control of vestibular, proprioceptive, and visual stimulations. The flexion
posture, bradykinesia, tremor, and stiffness associated with PD impede the
development of balance techniques and increases reaction times [63].
As PD symptoms are based on the lack of dopamine, for almost 40 years,
the best treatment for PD has been levodopa combined with peripheral decar-
boxylase inhibitors (carbidopa, benserazide) to prevent levodopa from being