How To Manage Akinesia

An abnormal movement called akinesia occurs when individuals cannot move the way they want to. Patients may notice it in any combination affecting their balance, posture, or walking. It may be patients are actually moving, but their movement is so slow they just can't see it. But, it may also be their nerves fail to transmit timely movement intentions to their muscles. That is, innervation is slowed or interrupted within the nervous system connecting muscle to brain. In the case of constant tremor as in Parkinson's disease, the muscle command to move may have to originate between tremors causing muscle commands. Akinesia is not a thinking problem. It is a motor control management problem traced to the motor cortex. Get to know how to manage akinesia now.

Implantable Stimulators

Knoxville News Sentinel

Twenty-two years ago deep brain surgery was approved to treat abnormal movement associated with Parkinson's disease. The surgeon uses a combination of MRI or CT scans and brain cell monitoring to insert an implantable pulse generator into the brain, usually in the thalamus, subthalamic nucleus, or globus pallidus interna. This device contains a lead electrode inserted through the skull into the area interfering with movement generation. The lead is extended under the skin through an insulated wire to the device's stimulator component. A subcutaneous battery pack serving the stimulator is typically implanted near or below the collarbone. This nerve stimulator's task is to interfere with those nerve transmission problems of akinesia and block abnormal nerve signals to muscles at their source. Patients who have been candidates for the procedure may have full mitigation of their movement complaints or a reduction of medication dose. Risks, though not common, of implantable stimulators, include cranial bleeding, stroke, infection, or anesthesia side effects.

Understand more treatments for akinesia now.

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