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Effectiveness of Different Approaches for the Rehabilitation of Gait in Patients With Parkinson's Disease (Tr-T-VR)

O

Ospedale Generale Di Zona Moriggia-Pelascini

Status

Unknown

Conditions

PD
Gait Dysfunction, Neurologic
Rehabilitation

Treatments

Other: MIRT + Virtual Reality
Other: MIRT + Treadmill Plus
Other: MIRT + Treadmill

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03021408
OGZonaMP-PD Gait Rehab

Details and patient eligibility

About

Evaluation of the effectiveness of three different approaches for the rehabilitation of gait in patients with PD within a multidisciplinary, intensive rehabilitation treatment (MIRT).

Full description

Gait disorders represent one of principal hallmark of Parkinson's disease (PD). Typically, PD patients demonstrate reduced stride length and walking speed during free ambulation, while double support duration and cadence rate are increased. Gait disorders are generally poorly responsive to dopaminergic treatments and are related to reduced quality of life and augmented risk of falls. Different rehabilitation techniques based on compensatory and learning strategies, which principally exploit the use of cues to bypass the defective basal ganglia and to ameliorate performance through practice, have been demonstrated to be effective in improving gait in patients with PD. Cueing techniques represent the central core for the rehabilitation of parkinsonian gait. In this context, it has been demonstrated that treadmill training can improve gait performance in PD patients. It probably acts as an external cue exerting a normalizing effect on the spatiotemporal gait parameters and leading to an enhanced gait rhythmicity and a reduced gait variability. The use of a treadmill with visual and auditory cues (treadmill-plus) seems to lead to a better improvement in gait parameters when compared to treadmill alone. Recently, the application of virtual reality (VR) has been introduced in the rehabilitation of PD. The use of VR is based on the interaction of the person with a virtual environment with the aim to promote motor learning through enhanced perceptions (visual, auditory, and haptic inputs).

It has been widely demonstrated that a multidisciplinary, intensive, goal-based, motor-cognitive and aerobic treatment (MIRT), specifically designed for PD patients, provide parkinsonians with motor and functional benefits. Nevertheless, the contribution provided by treadmill, treadmill-plus and VR on gait parameters has not been previously addressed within MIRT.

This study aims at investigating the superiority or the non-inferiority of these different devices in improving gait in PD patients in the context of MIRT.

Enrollment

60 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

50 to 85 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Diagnosis of "probable" idiopathic Parkinson's disease according to Gelb et al (Gelb, 1999);
  • Mild to moderate stage of disease (stage 2-3) according to Hoehn & Yahr scale;
  • Ability to walk on treadmill;
  • Visual and hearing capacity sufficient to perceive the cues;
  • No cognitive impairment (Mini-Mental State Examination score ≥ 26);
  • Stable pharmacological treatment since 2 weeks before admission and during rehabilitation;

Exclusion criteria

  • Diagnosis of atypical or vascular Parkinsonism;
  • Occurrence of cardiovascular, orthopaedic, peripheral nerves, musculoskeletal and vestibular disorders which could affect patient's locomotion or balance;
  • Neuropsychiatric disturbances;
  • Severe dyskinesia;
  • Severe freezing of gait;

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

60 participants in 3 patient groups

MIRT + Treadmill
Experimental group
Description:
In the context of MIRT, the gait training in this group will be performed by using a treadmill without cues.
Treatment:
Other: MIRT + Treadmill
MIRT + Treadmill Plus
Experimental group
Description:
In the context of MIRT, the gait training in this group will be performed by using a treadmill with visual and auditory cues.
Treatment:
Other: MIRT + Treadmill Plus
MIRT + Virtual Reality
Experimental group
Description:
In the context of MIRT, the gait training in this group will be performed by using Virtual Reality with enhanced perceptions (visual, auditory, and haptic inputs).
Treatment:
Other: MIRT + Virtual Reality

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Ilaria Zivi, MD; Davide Ferrazzoli, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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