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Balance rehabilitation programs in people with Parkinson's disease (PD) that include functional exercises, i.e. using tasks of daily living in training, show improvements in variables related to balance and gait. In previous studies, the advantage of taking into account the specificity of the task and the inclusion of specific objectives for the motor rehabilitation of people with PD has been observed. The interventions with the best results are usually carried out in hospital centers or rehabilitation gyms and, in groups of people.
Due to the situation experienced since last March 2020, due to the Covid-19 pandemic, group rehabilitation programs have been affected, especially in those pathologies that involve older age groups such as PD. For this reason, the need to transfer therapies to the home is considered, as well as to make people aware of the importance of continued rehabilitation, even from other settings. In the present study, we propose a rehabilitation program at home for people with Parkinson's disease based on balance with functional exercises, which will be compared with a home control group of people with PD that stay at home without any physical rehabilitation, and a conventional group physiotherapy program carried out in a rehabilitation gym in groups of 6 people. The effects of the experimental intervention and the control groups will be evaluated on outcomes related to balance using a dynamometric platform and outcomes related to gait through 3D photogrammetry.
Full description
I. Objectives and Hypothesis
General objective: To determine if the effects of home rehabilitation of functional balance on the biomechanics of balance and gait, quality of life, cognitive status, and general physical performance are greater than the effects observed from the daily life activities at home, and from a conventional face-to-face group physiotherapy program.
Specific objectives:
II. General procedures
First, the approval of the Human Ethics Committee of the University of Valencia has been obtained. After managing the agreement with the Parkinson Valencia Association, the recruitment of participants will be carried out and, to those interested, an information sheet will be given with all the details of the study. Once the intention to participate has been confirmed, a first evaluation of the volunteers will be carried out to verify compliance with the proposed selection criteria. In this evaluation, the documents of informed consent and authorization for the use of images in scientific publications will be signed if required; In addition, at this time a code will be assigned to each participant to ensure their anonymity during the investigation to the evaluating staff and those in charge of randomization and data analysis.
People were recruited who, as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic had transferred home or telematically all their therapies related to Parkinson's disease, and on the other hand, were also recruited people who continued with therapies face-to-face. From the home volunteer participants, they will be divided by a sequence of random numbers provided by the IBM SPSS Statistics v.23 program into two groups: experimental group and home control group. Additionally, the volunteers who maintained their therapies outside the home made up the conventional control group.
The evaluator will not know the assignment of the participants. After randomization, it will be verified that the groups (experimental, home control, and conventional control group) do not differ significantly in their sociodemographic characteristics, and severity of the disease. The physiotherapist who will carry out the evaluations of the outcomes before and after the intervention period will be a different person from the professional who will evaluate the participation criteria. On the other hand, the intervention programs (experimental and conventional) will be carried out by two different physiotherapists. Both the assessment and the physiotherapy sessions do not contain invasive procedures and only require participants to perform therapeutic exercises adapted to the physical condition of people with PD.
The pre-intervention (T0), post-intervention (T1), and follow-up evaluations at 8 weeks (T2) will be carried out at the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Valencia, with the tools provided by the research group to which the main researcher of the project belongs. The interventions of the experimental group will take place at the home of each participant. The group control group sessions will be held at the Parkinson Valencia Association facilities.
III. Methodology
III.1. Study design
The proposed study consists of a single-blind, randomized clinical trial with crossover. The study protocol has been developed according to the SPIRIT 2013 statement.
Subjects will participate in a baseline assessment session (T0) before rehabilitative treatment, followed by random allocation to the Experimental group (8 weeks of functional balance physiotherapy) or the Home control group (daily functional activity). After these 8 weeks, all the participants will develop a second assessment session (T1) and rest for the next 8 weeks to later carry out the follow-up assessment session (T2). At this time, patients from the Home control group will be switch to the Experimental group, and participants from the Experimental group will follow a 4-month period of inactivity wash-out. After this, they will carry out the T0, T1, and T2 evaluations following the Home control group protocol.
Additionally, a third group of participants with Parkinson's disease who regularly receive conventional physiotherapy were evaluated (Conventional control group). The evaluation sessions will be before starting the usual rehabilitation program after the 2-months summer break (T0), after 8-weeks of rehabilitation (T1), and after 8-weeks of follow-up (T2). This group of participants will carry out the physiotherapy in the usual format, that is, in a rehabilitation gym and in groups of 6 people.
III.2 Participants
The initial recruitment should be 112 people.
Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
III.3 Assessment and outcomes
I. Outcomes collected from the biomechanical evaluation of the balance and movement of the pressure center:
II. Outcomes collected from the biomechanical evaluation of gait:
III. Outcomes obtained from performing clinical scales and tests:
III.4 Description of the interventions
Experimental intervention - Experimental group: consists of a specific home balance rehabilitation program for people with PD through functional tasks. The main strategy will be to break down a daily task into static and dynamic exercises, in order to experience an individualized progression within each physiotherapy session. Each session will last 1 hour and there will be two sessions a week for 8 weeks. In turn, the sessions will be divided into the warm-up phase (10 minutes), the central phase of functional balance training (45 minutes) and the final stretching phase (5 minutes). In the warm-up phase, other therapeutic objectives will be alternated to work during the sessions because the experimental program focuses on balance training.
Control interventions:
III.5 Sample size, randomization and blinding
To achieve the main objective proposed in this study, a total of 93 people diagnosed with PD will be recruited. This sample size has been determined using the G*Power v.3.1 to detect a difference between the groups (3), with a small-medium effect (f = 0.15), a statistical significance of 5% at the two-tailed level, and a power of 95%. If 20% of possible dropouts are also considered during the study, the initial recruitment should be 112 people.
An extern researcher who is not involved in the development of the study will perform the randomization process. Stratified randomization will be performed considering the Hoehn & Yahr stages and the cognitive state. Participants will be allocated accordingly to: 1) Experimental intervention or 2) Home control group. The treating physiotherapists thereafter be responsible for the management and organization of the appointments with participants. To ensure masking, the assessments and the treatments were performed by different therapists.
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112 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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