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Swallowing difficulty (dysphagia) is a clinical symptom of Parkinson's disease (PD) that significantly impacts nutrition, oral secretion management, health status, and quality of life]. Specific hallmarks of dysphagia in patients with PD include tongue weakness, reduced swallowing frequency and efficiency, and airway invasion. Evidence for effective treatment techniques to address dysphagia in patients with PD is limited and urgently needed, substantiating the systematic study of standard-of-care treatments in this population as well as the development of novel techniques. Motor imagery practice (MIP) is a mentally rehearsed form of exercise that does not involve muscle activation and has been shown to improve motor outcomes in limb rehabilitation. MIP is novel to swallowing rehabilitation. Our group has conducted preliminary MIP studies in healthy older adults and demonstrated improved measures of tongue strength and swallowing pressure when MIP is used in combination with physical tongue exercise compared to physical tongue exercise alone. The next step is to evaluate the use of MIP in patients with dysphagia. The purpose of this research is to determine the feasibility and effect of MIP when added to a physical swallowing-related exercise protocol for patients with PD. Changes in tongue pressure generation, spontaneous swallowing frequency, functional physiological swallowing outcomes, and patient-reported outcomes will be examined. This research aims to fill gaps in evidence specific to dysphagia in patients with PD and to evaluate a novel rehabilitation method. The investigators anticipate that the results of this study will inform clinical practice, with evidence for supporting the improvement of swallowing function and quality of life in patients with PD, and lay the groundwork for the design of future randomized controlled clinical trials.
Full description
The proposed study is a five-site research collaboration between Samford University (Birmingham, AL, Dr. Sarah Szynkiewicz), Case Western Reserve University (Cleveland, OH, Dr. Rachel Mulheren), Emerson College (Boston, MA, Dr. Lindsay Griffin), James Madison University (Harrisonburg, VA, Dr. Erin Kamarunas), and Texas Christian University (Fort Worth, TX, Dr. Teresa Drulia). The Samford IRB serves as the main IRB, with the other sites executing IRB Authorized Agreements with Samford's IRB. The research sessions will be conducted in each site PI's university laboratory and each site PI will be responsible for overseeing the recruitment and data collection at their respective site. Standardized forms and training to both the protocol and data analysis will be completed across all sites and will ensure research fidelity.
The investigators will conduct a multiple baseline single case study (n = 10) to determine feasibility and explore the preliminary effects of motor imagery practice (MIP) on swallowing function in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). Single case designs are often used as an initial exploration of treatment efficacy prior to a randomized controlled trial. Using this prospective design, participants with PD will complete:
The findings of this single case design study will inform the feasibility of methods and provide an estimate of rehabilitation outcomes that will lead to the development of larger randomized controlled clinical trials to determine the efficacy of this promising, novel MIP approach to swallowing rehabilitation in PD and other patient populations with dysphagia. The investigators anticipate this research will confirm the feasibility of using motor imagery practice (MIP) to improve swallowing-related outcomes for patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). The investigators hypothesize that patients with PD will demonstrate a faster rate of improved tongue pressure and spontaneous swallowing frequency during the four-week physical swallowing-related exercise + MIP practice protocol (experimental treatment) compared to the four weeks of physical exercise only (standard of care treatment). Furthermore, the investigators hypothesize that these changes will result in greater improvements in swallowing efficiency and safety (as measured objectively using instrumental swallowing assessment) at the end of treatment. The investigators also expect to provide preliminary evidence that spontaneous swallowing frequency can be used as a measure of functional change in swallowing in patients with PD when instrumental evaluation cannot be accessed or used in repetition.
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Inclusion criteria. Individuals will be able to participate if they:
Exclusion criteria. Individuals will not be eligible to participate if they report:
No potential participant will be excluded on the basis of race, color, creed, sex, sexual orientation, or national origin.
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10 participants in 4 patient groups
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Sarah Szynkiewicz, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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