Generalization of In-Place Balance Perturbation Training in People With Parkinson Disease.

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Journal of Neurologic Physical Therapy Pub Date : 2024-07-01 Epub Date: 2024-03-14 DOI:10.1097/NPT.0000000000000471
Andrew S Monaghan, Andrew Hooyman, Leland E Dibble, Shyamal H Mehta, Daniel S Peterson
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Abstract

Background and purpose: Reactive balance training improves reactive postural control in people with Parkinson disease (PwPD). However, the extent to which reactive balance training generalizes to a novel, unpracticed reactive balance task is unknown. This study aimed to determine whether reactive training stepping through support surface translations can be generalized to an unpracticed, instrumented tether-release task.

Methods: Twenty-five PwPD (70.52 years ± 7.15; Hoehn and Yahr range 1-3) completed a multiple baseline, open-label, uncontrolled pre-post intervention study. Stepping was trained through a 2-week (6-session) intervention with repeated support surface translations. Performance on an untrained tether-release task (generalization task) was measured at 2 baseline assessments (B1 and B2, 2 weeks apart), immediately after the intervention (P1), and 2 months after training (P2). The tether-release task outcomes were the anterior-posterior margin of stability (MOS), step length, and step latency during backward and forward steps.

Results: After support surface translation practice, tether-release stepping performance improved in MOS, step length, and step latency for both backward and forward steps compared to baseline ( P < 0.05). Improvements in MOS and step length during backward and forward steps in the tether-release task, respectively, were related to stepping changes in the practiced task. However, the improvements in the generalization task were not retained for 2 months.

Discussion and conclusions: These findings support short-term generalization from trained balance tasks to novel, untrained tasks. These findings contribute to our understanding of the effects and generalization of reactive step training in PwPD.

Video abstract available: for more insights from the authors (see the Video, Supplemental Digital Content available at http://links.lww.com/JNPT/A465 ).

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帕金森病患者原地平衡扰动训练的推广。
背景和目的:反应性平衡训练可改善帕金森病患者(PwPD)的反应性姿势控制。然而,反应性平衡训练能在多大程度上推广到新的、未经练习的反应性平衡任务中,目前尚不清楚。本研究旨在确定通过支撑面平移进行的反应性训练是否能推广到未练习过的仪器系绳释放任务中:方法:25 名残疾人(70.52 岁 ± 7.15;Hoehn 和 Yahr 范围 1-3)完成了一项多基线、开放标签、非对照的前后干预研究。通过为期 2 周(6 次课)的干预,在重复支撑面平移的情况下进行步态训练。在两次基线评估(B1 和 B2,相隔 2 周)、干预后立即评估(P1)和训练后 2 个月(P2)时,分别测量了未经训练的系绳释放任务(泛化任务)的表现。系绳释放任务的结果是前后稳定幅度(MOS)、步长以及前后步的步进潜伏期:结果:在进行支撑面平移练习后,与基线(P)相比,系绳释放步法在前后步的稳定性边际(MOS)、步长和步进潜伏期方面都有所提高:这些发现支持从训练过的平衡任务到未训练过的新任务的短期泛化。这些发现有助于我们了解反应性步法训练在残疾人中的效果和推广。视频摘要中提供了作者的更多见解(请参阅视频,补充数字内容可在 http://links.lww.com/JNPT/A465 上获取)。
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来源期刊
Journal of Neurologic Physical Therapy
Journal of Neurologic Physical Therapy CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-REHABILITATION
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
2.60%
发文量
63
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Neurologic Physical Therapy (JNPT) is an indexed resource for dissemination of research-based evidence related to neurologic physical therapy intervention. High standards of quality are maintained through a rigorous, double-blinded, peer-review process and adherence to standards recommended by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors. With an international editorial board made up of preeminent researchers and clinicians, JNPT publishes articles of global relevance for examination, evaluation, prognosis, intervention, and outcomes for individuals with movement deficits due to neurologic conditions. Through systematic reviews, research articles, case studies, and clinical perspectives, JNPT promotes the integration of evidence into theory, education, research, and practice of neurologic physical therapy, spanning the continuum from pathophysiology to societal participation.
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