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Dance for Parkinson's Disease® (DfPD®) is a specially designed dance program for individuals with PD. This study assesses the efficacy, safety and feasibility of a culturally adapted DfPD® program offered both live and online in Greek PD patients.
A total of 40 early-to-mid-stage PD Greek patients have been enrolled to underwent a total of 16 60-min classes twice weekly over 8 weeks both live and online as well as to be part of the non-intervention control group in a 3-arms crossover randomized controlled clinical trial. Assessments will be performed at baseline and at the end of each study period and will include quality of life, fatigue, depressive symptoms, stress, anxiety, sarcopenia, frailty, balance, cognitive functions, movement and non-movement PD symptoms, and Body Mass Index (BMI). Safety and feasibility of each of the dance interventions (live DfPD® vs remote DfPD®) will be assessed.
Full description
Parkinson's Disease (PD) is an idiopathic, neurodegenerative, and progressive movement disorder in which several types of physical exercise seem to have positive effects. Dance, as a form of organized physical activity, seems to more easily motivate PD patients to attend exercise classes with higher compliance rates and lower dropout rates in comparison with other means of exercise.
Dance for Parkinson's Disease® (DfPD®, or Dance for PD®) is a structured therapeutic dance program for people with PD designed by the Brooklyn Parkinson Group (BPG) and the Mark Morris Dance Group (MMDG) in 2001. The positive effect of the above program has been already shown for several factors, such as Quality of Life (QoL), motor functions, cognition, self-efficacy, anxiety, depression, and fatigue in PD patients. To our knowledge, there is no study investigating the effect of DfPD® on PD patients' frailty and sarcopenia. In addition, no randomized controlled clinical study to date has been conducted to investigate the effect of DfPD® on Greek PD patients to any parameter.
The main research purpose of that study is to investigate the possible positive effects of DfPD® in QoL, fatigue, depressive symptoms, stress, anxiety, sarcopenia, frailty, balance, cognitive functions, movement and non-movement PD symptoms, and Body Mass Index (BMI) of Greek Parkinson's individuals. The above scientific study is a 3-arms crossover randomized controlled clinical trial (live DfPD® vs remote DfPD® vs Control), and the experimental period will be of 10 months, including 3 periods of two months intervention of two 60min dance classes per week for each group (live DfPD® vs remote DfPD®) versus control group (non-intervention group) and 2 washout periods of two months between.
A total of 40 early-to-mid-stage PD Greek patients have been enrolled to underwent a total of 16 60-min classes twice weekly over 8 weeks both live and online as well as to be part of the non-intervention control group. Assessments will be performed at the baseline and at the end of each period (6 in total per individual) for each of the above parameters. Safety and feasibility will also be assessed.
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40 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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