Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
People with Parkinson Disease (PWPD) have significant problems with velocity, safety and dual tasking during walking that may be secondary to poor automaticity. Sensory functions, especially visual dependence and proprioceptive integration are critical for efficient walking and are often impaired. This home program compares the use of multimodal sensory feedback during stepping and balance exercises in PWPD to a group without the sensory feedback performing the same basic exercises.
Full description
Parkinson disease impairs motor and sensory functions. Automaticity of gait is lost increasing the use of higher center control of walking, leading to cognitive fatigue, slower movement and motor errors. People with Parkinson disease (PWPD) improve motor performance when external sensory cues, which bypass the faulty basal ganglia, are used during interventions. Enhancing proprioceptive, visual and vestibular cues that are critical for walking has the potential to improve gait and decrease cognitive fatigue by restoring automaticity.
This is a single-blinded randomized controlled study with repeated measures to evaluate the effects of a home exercise program with or without the addition of multi-modal sensory feedback (MMSF) in real-time on automaticity of gait and balance. PWPDs are randomly assigned to one of 2 home exercise groups. There are two 6 week exercise sessions with a 6 week of no exercises inter-spaced between them. The exercises promote rapid and large movement in stepping activities, balance using self-perturbation through single, leg swings and standing on a compliant surface for sensory re-weighting. People in the experimental group perform the program with real-time with MMSF. Participants are to progress exercises in speed and distance as well as performing with eyes closed to improve proprioceptive processing and automaticity.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
26 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal