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The Effect of Cervical Spinal Stabilization Exercises in Patients With Parkinson's Disease

H

Hacettepe University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Parkinson Disease

Treatments

Other: cervical spinal stabilization exercise

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03854747
Parkinson's disease treatment

Details and patient eligibility

About

Parkinson's disease (PH); it occurs due to dopamine deficiency due to the loss of dopaminergic neurons in a degenerative process in the substantia nigra found in the middle brain; resting tremor, bradykinesia, trunk and extremities rigidity, mask facial and postural instability characterized by a neurodegenerative disease. These findings are basic and also motor symptoms of Parkinson's Disease. Non-motor symptoms include many problems ranging from autonomic dysfunction to sensory symptoms.

Treatment of Parkinson's disease requires a multidisciplinary approach such as medical treatment, physiotherapy and rehabilitation, surgical treatment.

Physiotherapy programs applied to patients with Parkinson's disease include classical physiotherapy methods and neurophysiological based methods.

Spinal stabilization is an important concept for proper control of body balance and extremity movements. Spinal stabilization training was based on biomechanics, neurophysiology and physiotherapy research. Stabilization exercises, which form the basis of spinal stabilization training, increase the strength and endurance of the postural and stabilizing muscles using the basic principles of motor learning and improve stability control in stable and unstable positions, provides postural smoothness.

The cervical region is one of the most affected regions of the musculoskeletal system due to the intensive proprioceptors.

Although studies have been carried out to investigate the effect of spinal stabilization exercises in Parkinson's patients, there is no study on the effect of cervical region stabilization exercises in the literature despite these important connections of the cervical region.

For these reasons, this study is planned to investigate the effects of cervical spinal stabilization exercises on spinal posture, cervical proprioception and postural instability in Parkinson's patients.

Hypothesis 1: When cervical spinal stabilization exercises are added to the traditional physiotherapy program in Parkinson's patients, it will be more effective in correcting spinal posture.

Hypothesis 2: When cervical spinal stabilization exercises are added to the traditional physiotherapy program in Parkinson's patients, cervical proprioception will develop better.

Hypothesis 3: In the case of Parkinson's patients, when the cervical spinal stabilization exercises are added to the traditional physiotherapy program, postural stability may be more pronounced.

Enrollment

18 patients

Sex

All

Ages

40 to 80 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Diagnosis of idiopathic Parkinson's disease,
  • Having planned a traditional physiotherapy program for Parkinson's disease and referring to Hacettepe University Faculty of Health Sciences Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation Department,
  • 40 to 80 years old,
  • According to Hoehn-Yahr scale to be in stage 2 or 3,
  • Having scored 30 points above the posture evaluation
  • Postural disorder in the femoral region, but the absence of structural disorder (congenital spinal deformities in medical evaluations prior to the study, structural disorders caused by other diseases should be determined that the spine does not have problems),
  • 26 points higher than the mini-mental test,
  • Disease duration is 3 years and above,
  • The absence of any other neurological disease other than vestibular and / or Parkinson's, which may affect muscle strength, balance and coordination,
  • Spinal colon and lower extremity musculoskeletal system, which may affect the stabilization of any surgery has been identified as.

Exclusion criteria

  • Volunteers who do not comply with the inclusion criteria will not be included in the study.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

18 participants in 2 patient groups

control group
No Intervention group
working group
Experimental group
Treatment:
Other: cervical spinal stabilization exercise

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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