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Comparison between clinical and kinematic assessment of bradykinesia

G. Paparella, A. de Biase, L. Angelini, A. Cannavacciuolo, D. Colella, A. Guerra, D. Alunni Fegatelli, A. Berardelli, M. Bologna (Pozzilli, Italy)

Meeting: 2022 International Congress

Abstract Number: 835

Keywords: Bradykinesia, Essential tremor(ET), Neurophysiology

Category: Phenomenology and Clinical Assessment of Movement Disorders

Objective: To compare the clinical and kinematic assessment of bradykinesia (movement slowness).

Background: Bradykinesia may be present not only in Parkinson’s disease (PD), but also in essential tremor (ET) and in normal elderly subjects [1-3]. In some cases, the detection of bradykinesia by clinical examination may be challenging, and no objective cut-offs have been identified at kinematic analysis.

Method: Simultaneous video and kinematic recordings of finger tapping were performed in 44 PD patients, 69 ET patients, and 77 healthy subjects (HCs). Videos were blindly evaluated by 7 neurologists, according to standardized clinical scales. Kinematic recordings were analyzed offline by a dedicated software [3]. We calculated the inter-raters’ agreement by the Fleiss’ K. We compared clinical scores and kinematic data with ANOVAs. Clinical evaluation scores-stratified density plots were used to evaluate the overlapping in the distribution of the kinematic data. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were used to identify cut-offs to distinguish between subjects with bradykinesia (median clinical scores ≥ 2) and those without bradykinesia (median clinical scores < 2).

Results: We found a fair agreement among raters (Fleiss K=0.34). We found the highest clinical scores in PD, and higher scores in ET than in HCs (all p values<0.001). The kinematic analysis showed that the three groups differed in terms of movement velocity and amplitude, with the lowest values being detected in PD (all p values<0.001). Density plots demonstrated a marked overlapping between kinematic data curves, indicating that a given clinical score reflected a wide range of movement velocities [Figure 1]. ROC curves showed that kinematic distinguished subjects with and without bradykinesia (AUC=0.797, 95%CI 0.716-0.878) [Figure 2]. The kinematic cut-off of 730 degrees/sec had a sensitivity of 0.923 (95%CI 0.640-0.998) and specificity 0.847 (95%CI 0.786-0.897).

Conclusion: We here compared clinical and kinematic assessment of bradykinesia and identified a possible cut-off value distinguishing subjects with and without bradykinesia. The study results may be relevant for bradykinesia detection and patients’ classification.

Figure 2

Figure 1

References: 1. Bologna M, Paparella G, Fasano A, Hallett M, Berardelli A. Evolving concepts on bradykinesia. Brain. 2020 Mar 1;143(3):727-750. doi: 10.1093/brain/awz344. PMID: 31834375; PMCID: PMC8205506.
2. Paparella G, Fasano A, Hallett M, Berardelli A, Bologna M. Emerging concepts on bradykinesia in non-parkinsonian conditions. Eur J Neurol. 2021 Jul;28(7):2403-2422. doi: 10.1111/ene.14851. Epub 2021 May 18. PMID: 33793037.
3. Bologna M, Paparella G, Colella D, Cannavacciuolo A, Angelini L, Alunni-Fegatelli D, Guerra A, Berardelli A. Is there evidence of bradykinesia in essential tremor? Eur J Neurol. 2020 Aug;27(8):1501-1509. doi: 10.1111/ene.14312. Epub 2020 May 31. PMID: 32396976.

To cite this abstract in AMA style:

G. Paparella, A. de Biase, L. Angelini, A. Cannavacciuolo, D. Colella, A. Guerra, D. Alunni Fegatelli, A. Berardelli, M. Bologna. Comparison between clinical and kinematic assessment of bradykinesia [abstract]. Mov Disord. 2022; 37 (suppl 2). https://www.mdsabstracts.org/abstract/comparison-between-clinical-and-kinematic-assessment-of-bradykinesia/. Accessed June 15, 2025.
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