Borrione P, Tranchita E, Sansone P, Parisi A. Effects of physical activity in Parkinson's disease: A new tool for rehabilitation. World J Methodol 2014; 4(3): 133-143 [PMID: 25332912 DOI: 10.5662/wjm.v4.i3.133]
Corresponding Author of This Article
Paolo Borrione, MD, Department of Movement, Human and Health Sciences, University of Rome “Foro Italico”, Piazza Lauro de Bosis 15, 00194 Rome, Italy. paolo.borrione@uniroma4.it
Research Domain of This Article
Sport Sciences
Article-Type of This Article
Editorial
Open-Access Policy of This Article
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Auditory cues improved performance (stride length) in the functional task, and a tendency for increased walking speed was noticed with both types of cue
PRE program, focused mainly on lower limbs muscles
2 times/wk for 10 wk
Improvement in both postural adjustment and spatiotemporal parameters during gait initiation (protective effect on falls), and improved muscle strength
Tai Chi group improved their postural stability significantly more than both the other groups; stride length and velocity, strength, timed up-and-go test, functional reaching and UPDRS-III score were significantly higher in the Tai Chi group when compared with stretching; Tai Chi improved stride length, reduced rate of falls at follow up and, as shown by the posturography, there was a reduction of deviations of movement, which the authors suggest to be a reduction of dyskinesia
Intervention showed a “stabilizing effect on PD symptoms”: specifically, postural instability improved, as well as UPDRS-III score. Also, autonomic dysfunction (constipation and pain) decreased, and during physiotherapy sleep disturbances and daytime sleepiness diminished
60 min session, 2 d/wk for 13 wk (total 20 session)
Both types of dance improved gait speed, balance, backward stride length, cardiovascular function and symptoms (UPDRS); only Tango generated improvements for FoG
Bradykinesia and motor symptoms severity (assessed with MDS-UPDRS-III) were reduced; gait speed, balance, dual task walking speed and upper extremity function all improved; rigidity, FoG and gait endurance remained stable, but in the control group they progressively worsened, (“braking” effect on PD progression)
Citation: Borrione P, Tranchita E, Sansone P, Parisi A. Effects of physical activity in Parkinson's disease: A new tool for rehabilitation. World J Methodol 2014; 4(3): 133-143