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Exercise for People in Early- or Mid-Stage Parkinson Disease: A 16-Month Randomized Controlled Trial
by
Deborah A. Hall
, Margaret Schenkman
, Robert S. Schwartz
, Pamela Mettler
, Wendy M. Kohrt
, Anna E. Barón
in
Activities of Daily Living
/ Care and treatment
/ Disability Evaluation
/ Exercise
/ Exercise Therapy - methods
/ Female
/ Health aspects
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Older people
/ Parkinson disease
/ Parkinson Disease - physiopathology
/ Parkinson Disease - rehabilitation
/ Parkinson's disease
/ Patient outcomes
/ Physical fitness
/ Physical Therapy Modalities
/ Postural Balance
/ Quality of Life
/ Research Reports
/ Severity of Illness Index
/ Treatment Outcome
/ Walking
2012
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Exercise for People in Early- or Mid-Stage Parkinson Disease: A 16-Month Randomized Controlled Trial
by
Deborah A. Hall
, Margaret Schenkman
, Robert S. Schwartz
, Pamela Mettler
, Wendy M. Kohrt
, Anna E. Barón
in
Activities of Daily Living
/ Care and treatment
/ Disability Evaluation
/ Exercise
/ Exercise Therapy - methods
/ Female
/ Health aspects
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Older people
/ Parkinson disease
/ Parkinson Disease - physiopathology
/ Parkinson Disease - rehabilitation
/ Parkinson's disease
/ Patient outcomes
/ Physical fitness
/ Physical Therapy Modalities
/ Postural Balance
/ Quality of Life
/ Research Reports
/ Severity of Illness Index
/ Treatment Outcome
/ Walking
2012
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Exercise for People in Early- or Mid-Stage Parkinson Disease: A 16-Month Randomized Controlled Trial
by
Deborah A. Hall
, Margaret Schenkman
, Robert S. Schwartz
, Pamela Mettler
, Wendy M. Kohrt
, Anna E. Barón
in
Activities of Daily Living
/ Care and treatment
/ Disability Evaluation
/ Exercise
/ Exercise Therapy - methods
/ Female
/ Health aspects
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Older people
/ Parkinson disease
/ Parkinson Disease - physiopathology
/ Parkinson Disease - rehabilitation
/ Parkinson's disease
/ Patient outcomes
/ Physical fitness
/ Physical Therapy Modalities
/ Postural Balance
/ Quality of Life
/ Research Reports
/ Severity of Illness Index
/ Treatment Outcome
/ Walking
2012
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Exercise for People in Early- or Mid-Stage Parkinson Disease: A 16-Month Randomized Controlled Trial
Journal Article
Exercise for People in Early- or Mid-Stage Parkinson Disease: A 16-Month Randomized Controlled Trial
2012
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Overview
Exercise confers short-term benefits for individuals with Parkinson disease (PD).
The purpose of the study was to compare short- and long-term responses among 2 supervised exercise programs and a home-based control exercise program.
The 16-month randomized controlled exercise intervention investigated 3 exercise approaches: flexibility/balance/function exercise (FBF), supervised aerobic exercise (AE), and home-based exercise (control).
This study was conducted in outpatient clinics.
The participants were 121 individuals with PD (Hoehn & Yahr stages 1-3).
The FBF program (individualized spinal and extremity flexibility exercises followed by group balance/functional training) was supervised by a physical therapist. The AE program (using a treadmill, bike, or elliptical trainer) was supervised by an exercise trainer. Supervision was provided 3 days per week for 4 months, and then monthly (16 months total). The control group participants exercised at home using the National Parkinson Foundation Fitness Counts program, with 1 supervised, clinic-based group session per month.
Outcomes, obtained by blinded assessors, were determined at 4, 10, and 16 months. The primary outcome measures were overall physical function (Continuous Scale-Physical Functional Performance [CS-PFP]), balance (Functional Reach Test [FRT]), and walking economy (oxygen uptake [mL/kg/min]). Secondary outcome measures were symptom severity (Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale [UPDRS] activities of daily living [ADL] and motor subscales) and quality of life (39-item Parkinson's Disease Quality of Life Scale [PDQ-39]).
Of the 121 participants, 86.8%, 82.6%, and 79.3% completed 4, 10, and 16 months, respectively, of the intervention. At 4 months, improvement in CS-PFP scores was greater in the FBF group than in the control group (mean difference=4.3, 95% confidence interval [CI]=1.2 to 7.3) and the AE group (mean difference=3.1, 95% CI=0.0 to 6.2). Balance was not different among groups at any time point. Walking economy improved in the AE group compared with the FBF group at 4 months (mean difference=-1.2, 95% CI=-1.9 to -0.5), 10 months (mean difference=-1.2, 95% CI=-1.9 to -0.5), and 16 months (mean difference=-1.7, 95% CI=-2.5 to -1.0). The only secondary outcome that showed significant differences was UPDRS ADL subscale scores: the FBF group performed better than the control group at 4 months (mean difference=-1.47, 95% CI=-2.79 to -0.15) and 16 months (mean difference=-1.95, 95% CI=-3.84 to -0.08).
Absence of a non-exercise control group was a limitation of the study.
Findings demonstrated overall functional benefits at 4 months in the FBF group and improved walking economy (up to 16 months) in the AE group.
Publisher
American Physical Therapy Association,Oxford University Press
Subject
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