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Progressive Modular Rebalancing (RMP) System Rehabilitation Combined With Sensory Cues for Rehabilitation of Patients With PD

U

University of Roma La Sapienza

Status

Completed

Conditions

Movement Disorders
Parkinson Disease

Treatments

Other: Treatment B Conventional physiotherapy
Other: Treatment A combined exercise program and gait training with sensory cues

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

In the present study, the investigators propose a rehabilitative program for Parkinson' disease based on the combination of a neurocognitive method, i.e. visual sensory cues, with a neurophysiological method, i.e. RMP, in a randomized controlled trial with cross-over. The rationale herein was that the RMP may globally improve patients in terms of trunk control, motor performance, muscle tone, endurance and so on, predisposing them to improvement of the gait rhythm and automaticity induced by use of the visual external cues.

The primary aim of this pilot, randomized, controlled, trial with crossover was to establish whether a 8-week exercise program focused at improving gait in people with PD was more effective than a same-duration program of standard physiotherapy. The secondary aim was to evaluate the effect on the disease's severity. At this aims investigators used a quantitative 3D motion analysis system to evaluate gait parameters and UPDRS-II and UPDR-III and H-Y staging to evaluate the severity of the disease.

The investigators hypothesised that the both exercise programs will improve standard physiotherapy, however the proposed program will yield better improvements for the people with PD.

Full description

This study is a pilot, bi-centric, exploratory, randomized, controlled, crossover design with blind observer .

Subjects participated in a baseline assessment session (T0, before rehabilitative treatment), followed by random allocation to 8 weeks of rehabilitative treatments (A or B) (T1), followed by 1 month of inactivity wash out period. Following this wash-out period, patients who received treatment A switched to the treatment B and viceversa. A computerized randomization schedule was generated on the computer and held by an investigator not involved in subject recruitment or assessment.

Both clinical (neurological visit and scale administration) and instrumental (gait analysis) assessments were carried out 3 times: at baseline before rehabilitative treatment (T0), 4 weeks (T1, intermediate evaluation) and 8 weeks after rehabilitative treatments (T2, final evaluation). Medication was kept constant throughout the trial, and all interventions were performed at the same time of day for each patient during ON phase.

Participants were asked to maintain their pre-enrollment activity level and current medication dosage when not in the laboratory.

Assessors, for both clinical and instrumental evaluations, were blinded to the allocation treatment.

During the inactive condition, participants received usual care.

Enrollment

47 patients

Sex

All

Ages

55 to 76 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • diagnosis of idiopathic PD according to UK bank criteria
  • Hoehn and Yahr stages 1 to 3.
  • United Parkinson Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) gait subscore of 1 or more, no change in medication during the study period.
  • All patients were in a stable drug program and had adapted to their current medications for at least 2 weeks.

Exclusion criteria

  • cognitive deficits (defined as scores of <26 on the Mini-Mental State Examination [MMSE]),
  • moderate or severe depression (defined as scores of >17 on the Beck Depression Inventory [BDI]),
  • orthopedic and other gait-influencing diseases such as arthrosis or total hip joint replacement.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

47 participants in 2 patient groups

Group A
Experimental group
Description:
Treatment A consisted in a combined exercise program of 40 min duration RMP (Monari, 2004; Monari et al., 2016) and 20 min duration of gait training with sensory cues. RMP. RMP protocol was based on lengthening and muscular recruitment exercises by means of complex motor skills involving muscular kinetic chains in lower limbs and trunk. Each session was divided into muscular stretching exercise, aiming to increase step length and rotating trunk movements, and tailored progressive exercise therapy.
Treatment:
Other: Treatment A combined exercise program and gait training with sensory cues
Group B
Experimental group
Description:
Treatment B Conventional physiotherapy was composed of 4 sections of exercises, chiefly oriented to different body structures appropriate to movement (International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health code): trunk (s760), pelvis (s750), lower extremity (s750), and upper extremity (s730) including shoulder region (s720). Domains focused on were (1) warm-up exercises, (2) trunk mobility exercises, (3) postural stability (b715), and (4) transferring oneself (d420) and changing body positions (d410).
Treatment:
Other: Treatment B Conventional physiotherapy

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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