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The Hawks in Motion (HIM) High Intensity Exercise program is designed to implement the American Physical Therapy Clinical Practice Guidelines and American College of Sports Medicine recommendations for exercise for people with neurologic disability. Doctor of Physical Therapy (DPT) students administer the HIM High Intensity Exercise Program. A prior study evaluated the feasibility, safety, and efficacy of the HIM High Intensity Exercise Program and found it feasible, safe, and effective for 30 people with neurologic disabilities between the ages of 8-99 years. The investigators would like to evaluate whether participation in the HIM High Intensity Exercise Program affects mobility in everyday life. Physical activity will be measured one week before program implementation and one week after to assess if the participants' mobility in everyday improved.
Full description
The neurological conditions of spinal cord injury (SCI), stroke (CVA), traumatic brain injury (TBI), cerebral palsy (CP), Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT), and Parkinson's disease (PD) create a variety of physical impairments that make movement difficult. For example, people with SCI can have complete or partial paralysis of the arms, legs, and or trunk depending on the location and severity of injury. People with CMT have paralysis in specific muscles of the hands, feet, and trunk. Similarly, people with TBI, CVA, and CP can experience increased muscle tone, decreased voluntary movement, and difficulty moving at correct speeds. This makes walking, moving surface to surface, and doing other physical activities difficult, frustrating, and tiring. People tend not to move, and end up with chronic pain, heart disease, diabetes, and poor health. Physical inactivity is one of the most concerning issues among individuals with chronic neurological conditions, often resulting in limited community participation and reduced quality of life. Many individuals with these conditions struggle to achieve sufficient physical activity levels necessary for functional independence and movement in the community, essential for maintaining social connections and overall well-being. Despite the known benefits of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, challenges persist in improving mobility in community settings. It has been hypothesized that by increasing function and endurance, which the HIM High Intensity Program can do, mobility in everyday life may improve. The purpose of the project is to see if physical activity among individuals with chronic neurological disabilities can be increased by participation in a community-based exercise program. The investigators would like to answer the following research question: Does participation in an 8-week, twice-a-week high-intensity exercise program for people with neurologic disability run by Doctor of Physical Therapy students increase physical activity in the everyday life?
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15 participants in 1 patient group
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Mary E Gannotti, PT, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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