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Orthostatic Tremor (OT)

Orthostatic Tremor (OT) is a rare neurological movement disorder characterized by a high-frequency (13–18 Hz) tremor in the legs and trunk that occurs specifically during standing and is relieved by sitting, walking, or leaning.
Patients often describe it as a feeling of severe unsteadiness, vibration, or “shaking inside the legs” rather than a visible tremor.

OT is classified as:

  • Primary OT – no identifiable underlying neurological disease

  • Secondary OT – associated with conditions such as Parkinson’s disease, cerebellar disorders, peripheral neuropathy, or brainstem lesions

Body Systems Impacted by Orthostatic Tremor

Orthostatic Tremor affects multiple interacting systems, not just one:

1. Nervous System

  • Abnormal central oscillatory activity (likely brainstem–cerebellar–thalamic circuitry)

  • Altered motor unit firing synchronicity

  • Impaired postural control mechanisms

2. Musculoskeletal System

  • Excessive involuntary muscle activation in:

    • Quadriceps

    • Hamstrings

    • Gastrocnemius/soleus

    • Hip stabilizers

  • Fatigue

  • Reduced postural endurance

3. Sensory Systems

  • Proprioceptive system: impaired joint position sense under weight-bearing

  • Vestibular system: reduced ability to use vestibular input for postural stability

  • Visual system: increased visual dependency for balance

4. Cardiopulmonary System (Secondary Impact)

  • Deconditioning due to activity avoidance

  • Reduced tolerance to upright posture

5. Psychological / Emotional Health

  • Anxiety related to fear of falling

  • Depression from activity restrictions

  • Social withdrawal

How Orthostatic Tremor Affects Daily Life

OT can be profoundly disabling despite being invisible on casual observation:

  • ❌ Difficulty standing in:

    • Lines at stores

    • Social gatherings

    • Church events

    • Kitchens while cooking

  • ❌ Inability to tolerate:

    • Showers without support

    • Static standing at work

  • ❌ Dependence on:

    • Leaning on surfaces

    • Canes, walkers, or stools

  • ❌ Increased fall risk

  • ❌ Loss of independence

  • ❌ Occupational limitations

  • ❌ Social isolation

  • ❌ Fear-based mobility avoidance

Many patients report:

“I can walk, but I can’t stand still.”

 

 

 

Evidence-Based Physical Therapy Interventions for Orthostatic Tremor

There is no cure, but PT plays a major role in symptom management and functional improvement by targeting motor control, postural stability, and gait efficiency.

1. Motor Control Interventions

Goals: Normalize firing patterns, reduce co-contraction, improve postural endurance.

✔ Task-specific muscle activation training
✔ Low-load isometric stabilization (hips, trunk, ankle)
✔ Split-stance and staggered-stance motor control drills
✔ External cueing (visual, tactile, metronome-based)
✔ Weight-shifting training with graded exposure
✔ Closed-chain proximal stabilization (hips/core > distal)

2. Balance Training (Multisensory Integration)

Key principle: OT patients become overly reliant on vision—training must restore use of vestibular and somatosensory input.

✔ Static balance with reduced visual input

✔ Variable surface training (foam, compliant surfaces) - Using Motion Guidance easily integrates these options, keeps engagement high, and use trackable date to help follow progress.

✔ Narrow base of support progressions
✔ Perturbation-based balance training
✔ Dual-task balance activities
✔ Safety-harness supported standing tolerance training

 

 

3. Gait Training

Since OT improves with movement, gait becomes a therapeutic tool.

✔ Continuous walking programs
✔ Treadmill training with:

  • Body-weight support if needed

  • Speed variations
    ✔ Turning and transition training (stand → walk quickly)
    ✔ Step initiation and stopping drills
    ✔ Backward walking for neural recalibration
    ✔ Rhythm-based gait training (metronome)

4. Postural & Endurance Conditioning

✔ Trunk endurance training including dual tasking options seen here..✔ Hip abductor/extensor strengthening
✔ Cardiovascular conditioning using:

  • Recumbent bike

  • Elliptical

  • Pool therapy
    ✔ Upright tolerance building using graded intervals

 

SHOP MOTIONGUIDANCE® PRODUCTS MENTIONED IN THIS PAGE:

Visual Feedback Kit

Interactive Pod Kit

Patient Home Exerices Kit