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This study will investigate the effects of a 12-week arm ergometer exercise and balance training on upper extremity function in persons with multiple sclerosis.
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Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an inflammatory, demyelinating, neurodegenerative disease of the central nervous system of unknown etiology. The most common clinical signs and symptoms are motor dysfunction, fatigue, spasticity, impaired mobility, cognitive impairment, chronic pain, depression, decreased quality of life, and bladder and bowel dysfunction. 66% of people with MS (pwMS) have impaired upper extremity function.
As a result of the deterioration in upper extremity function, the performance of many daily living activities affects performance. As a result of this influence, there is a decrease in the functional independence of pwMS, quality of life and participation in activities in the community.
Another common symptom that reduces quality of life, independence, and participation in pwMS is balance disorder, seen in 75% of cases. Abnormality in balance control occurs due to lack of postural stability, limitation of stability limits, slowness to return to the starting position during bending and reaching activities. During interaction with the environment in daily life, proprioceptive inputs from the extremities and subsequent proper trunk control enable the person to keep the center of gravity on the support surface at rest and in activity. In this way, proximal stability is provided and tasks that require participation in daily life with distal mobility are performed. It is necessary to manage these progressive symptoms associated with the disease in order to increase the quality of life of pwMS, increase the rate of participation in society and maintain this increase.
Exercise training represents an existing behavioral treatment approach to safely manage many functional, symptomatic and quality-of-life outcomes in MS. Current literature reports that aerobic exercise has a positive effect on important parameters such as balance, fatigue, walking, quality of life, and pain in pwMS. At the same time, aerobic exercise training with arm ergometry allows pwMS to improve their upper extremity function. Apart from these, the literature has separately examined the effects of exercise training on upper extremity function and balance in pwMS, and positive effects have been shared separately. However, the relationship between these two important issues and the effect of exercise training on this relationship have not been examined.
The aim of the study is to examine the effects of exercise training on upper extremity function and balance in pwMS.
Persons who followed by the outpatient Multiple Sclerosis Clinic of Dokuz Eylül University Hospital will participate in the study. A total of 30 participants will randomly be divided into 2 groups as arm ergometer-balance training group and arm ergometer training group. Both exercise training will be given by a physiotherapist, supervised 2 days a week for 12 weeks. Assessments will done at baseline and after 12weeks (post-treatment). Assessments will be done by assessors who are blinded to the group allocation.
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30 participants in 2 patient groups
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Asiye Tuba Ozdogar, PhD; Serkan Ozakbas, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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