Abstract

BackgroundThe feeling of body ownership relies on the binding of multisensory body-related signals. Various sensory abnormalities have been described in Parkinson's disease (PD). ObjectiveTo assess the rubber hand illusion (RHI) in patients with PD (PwPD) and age-matched healthy controls (CTRL). To evaluate the influence of the dopaminergic system in a PwPD subgroup OFF medication. MethodsThe RHI paradigm was applied to 42 PwPD and 48 CTRL. In this experimental setup, stroking a visible plastic hand simultaneously with the covered real hand elicits the feeling of ownership over the seen hand. Asynchronous stroking served as a control condition. Proprioceptive bias and an illusion score based on a questionnaire were used as measures of the RHI. Seventeen PwPD additionally underwent the experiments “OFF medication”. ResultsCompared to CTRL, PwPD showed higher proprioceptive bias independent of the stroking condition (p = 0.015), and had higher illusion scores in the asynchronous condition (p < 0.05). In PwPD, there were no significant differences between ON- and OFF-medication state. ConclusionIn PwPD, responses to the RHI are less specific with respect to the degree of synchronicity of brushstrokes. This might be attributed to a less stable body representation, internal “noise” during multisensory integration, or a blur of temporal discrimination in PD. The fact that RHI measures did not differ between ON- and OFF-medication states indicates an involvement of non-dopaminergic transmitter systems in this finding.

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