npj Parkinson's Disease (Aug 2024)

The digital signature of emergent tremor in Parkinson’s disease

  • Aryaman S. Gala,
  • Kevin B. Wilkins,
  • Matthew N. Petrucci,
  • Yasmine M. Kehnemouyi,
  • Anca Velisar,
  • Megan H. Trager,
  • Helen M. Bronte-Stewart

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41531-024-00754-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Emergent tremor in Parkinson’s disease (PD) can occur during sustained postures or movements that are different from action tremor. Tremor can contaminate the clinical rating of bradykinesia during finger tapping. Currently, there is no reliable way of isolating emergent tremor and measuring the cardinal motor symptoms based on voluntary movements only. In this study, we investigated whether emergent tremor during repetitive alternating finger tapping (RAFT) on a quantitative digitography (QDG) device could be reliably identified and distinguished from voluntary tapping. Ninety-six individuals with PD and forty-two healthy controls performed a thirty-second QDG-RAFT task and the Movement Disorders Society – Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale Part III (MDS-UPDRS III). Visual identification of tremor during QDG-RAFT was labeled by an experienced movement disorders specialist. Two methods of identifying tremor were investigated: 1) physiologically informed temporal thresholds 2) XGBoost model using temporal and amplitude features of tapping. The XGBoost model showed high accuracy for identifying tremor (area under the precision-recall curve of 0.981) and outperformed temporal-based thresholds. Percent time duration of classifier-identified tremor showed significant correlations with MDS-UPDRS III tremor subscores (r = 0.50, p < 0.0001). There was a significant change in QDG metrics for bradykinesia, rigidity, and arrhythmicity after tremor strikes were excluded (p < 0.01). The results demonstrate that emergent tremor during QDG-RAFT has a unique digital signature and the duration of tremor correlated with the MDS-UPDRS III tremor items. When involuntary tremor strikes were excluded, the QDG metrics of bradykinesia and rigidity were significantly worse, demonstrating the importance of distinguishing tremor from voluntary movement when rating bradykinesia.