Abstract

By means of a quantitative system-analytic investigation strategy, the postural motor control of the fingers was evaluated, to characterise the possible deficit of force regulation in patients with parietal lesions. In spite of a normal response to short torque pulses, the parietal-lesion patients had difficulties in returning to the preload level after the application of an additional step torque load to fingers II–IV of their left or right hands. The control offset (measured 500 ms after step torque application) was significantly larger in the patient group. This deficit in the investigated patients with parietal lesions to compensate for step torque loads was not due to a paresis, but rather resulted from a disturbance in the generation of a sufficient counterforce against the applied step torque within an adequate time window and motor pattern. This distinct force-regulation deficit was found in patients with left- and right-sided parietal lesions.

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