Table 2.
Author, year | Aim/Hypothesis | Results | Was the aim achieved/ hypothesis confirmed? |
---|---|---|---|
Naismith and Lewis, 2010 [10] | To validate a VR paradigm modeling FOG without requiring the individual to walk | Inaugural study which designed the standard VR paradigm used to elicit FOG in PD participants. Worse performance on the VR paradigm correlated with higher scores on FOG-Q (p<0.05). | + |
Shine et al., 2011 [11] | To determine the neural correlates of FOG | Case study using fMRI compatible VR which identified a distinct pattern of brain activation and deactivation underlying freezing behavior (p<0.001; corrected with a false detection rate of p<0.05). | + |
Shine et al., 2013 [12] | To determine whether the VR measures for FOG can differentiate PD-FOG and PD-nFOG, and whether these measures correlate with FOG elicited during Timed Up-and-Go | VR induced more motor arrests in PD-FOG compared to PD-nFOG (p<0.01). The number and duration of FOG episodes during the VR paradigm positively correlated with clinically observed FOG duration during the Timed Up-and-Go (p<0.05). | + |
Shine et al., 2013 [13] | To investigate whether increased cognitive load was associated with different activation patterns in PD-FOG and PD-nFOG | PD-FOG are unable to properly recruit specific cortical and subcortical regions within the Cognitive Control Network while performing simultaneous motor and cognitive functions (corrected with a false detection rate of p<0.05) | + |
Shine et al., 2013 [14] | To determine neural correlates of FOG during “off” | FOG is associated with increased basal ganglia inhibitory output, leading to a decrease in thalamic and brainstem information processing (p<0.05 with family wise error correction for multiple comparisons). | + |
Shine et al., 2013 [15] | To determine whether FOG during the VR task was associated with impaired functional connectivity between the networks likely to be involved in FOG | During FOG, PD-FOG demonstrated decreased functional connectivity between the basal ganglia and the Cognitive Control Network in each hemisphere (alpha controlled by astrict Bonferroni; p=0.01, α/5 comparisons for network activity and p=0.005, α/10 comparisons for network connectivity). | + |
Matar et al., 2013 [16] | Greater conflict resolution and environmental stimuli requiring increased processing will be associated with delayed motor outflow in PD-FOG compared to PD-nFOG and HC. | PD-FOG had increased response latency when exposed to stimuli with higher levels of conflict resolution or when increased levels of visuospatial processing were required, compared to PD-nFOG and HC (p<0.05). | + |
Gilat et al., 2013 [17] | VR task will reproduce the key features of gait variability in PD. | The characteristic features of gait disturbance observed in PD-FOG can also be demonstrated with a VR paradigm: stride-time variability was greater in PD-FOG vs PD-nFOG, and was partially ameliorated by dopaminergic therapy (p<0.05 one-tailed). | + |
Matar et al., 2014 [18] | Footstep latency within the VR task will be increased during the “off” state compared to the “on” state in PD-FOG. | Motor delays when processing environmentally salient cues (wide and narrow doorways, and opening of a sliding door) improved with levodopa in PD-FOG but not PD-nFOG (p<0.05). | + |
Gilat et al., 2015 [19] | To investigate the neural correlates of turning deficits in PD and PD-FOG | Activation of inferior frontal regions and deactivation of premotor and superior parietal cortices; increased functional connectivity between subcortical regions while turning in PD-FOG (p<0.05 with false detection rate correction in the network-based statistics software). | + |
Georgiades et al., 2016 [20] | PD-FOG will experience footstep initiation and cessation deficits during the VR task compared to PD-nFOG and HC. | PD-FOG had more deficits in motor initiation and stopping performance, including stop failure, compared to PD-FOG and HC (p<0.05). | + |
Ehgoetz Martens et al., 2018 [6] | During episodes of FOG, fMRI will demonstrate be abnormal functional connectivity within and between cortico-striatal circuits. Network correlates of FOG will be associated with individual differences in the cognitive, motor and limbic features of FOG | Functional connectivity during FOG is correlated with particular cognitive, motor and limbic features, which may indicate subyptes of PD-FOG. During FOG, there was an overall loss of synchrony between the cortex and the striatum, as well as a loss of segregation and specificity between examined cortico-striatal pathways (p<0.05, connectivity strength either stronger or weaker than the 97.5th (or 2.5th) percentile of the null distribution, Cohen’s d ≥0.08) | + |
FOG: freezing of gait, PD-FOG: Parkinson’s disease patients with freezing of gait, PD-nFOG: Parkinson’s disease patients without freezing of gait, VR: virtual reality, HC: healthy controls, FOG-Q: Freezing of gait questionnaire, +: achieved/confirmed.