Exploring Responsiveness to Highly Challenging Balance and Gait Training in Parkinson's Disease.

IF 2.6 4区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Movement Disorders Clinical Practice Pub Date : 2024-08-21 DOI:10.1002/mdc3.14194
Franziska Albrecht, Hanna Johansson, Konstantinos Poulakis, Eric Westman, Maria Hagströmer, Erika Franzén
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Abstract

Background: Exercise potentially improves gait, balance, and habitual physical activity in Parkinson's disease (PD). However, given the heterogeneous nature of the disease, it is likely that people respond differently to exercise interventions. Factors determining responsiveness to exercise interventions remain unclear.

Objectives: To address this uncertainty, we explored the responsiveness to our highly challenging balance and gait intervention (HiBalance) in people with PD.

Methods: Thirty-nine participants with mild-moderate PD who underwent the HiBalance intervention from our randomized controlled trial were included. We defined response in three domains: (1) balance based on Mini-BESTest, (2) gait based on gait velocity, and (3) physical activity based on accelerometry-derived steps per day. In each domain, we explored three responsiveness levels: high, low, or non-responders according to the change from pre- to post-intervention. Separate Random Forests for each responder domain classified these responsiveness levels and identified variable importance.

Results: Only the Random Forest for the balance domain classified all responsiveness levels above the chance level indicated by a Cohen's kappa of "slight" agreement. Variable importance differed among the responsiveness levels. Slow gait velocity indicated high responders in the balance domain but showed low probabilities for low and non-responders. For low and non-responders, fall history or no falls, respectively, were more important.

Conclusions: Among three responder domains and responsiveness levels, we could moderately classify responders in the balance domain, but not for the gait or physical activity domain. This can guide inclusion criteria for balance-targeted, personalized intervention studies in people with PD.

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探索帕金森病患者对高难度平衡和步态训练的反应。
背景:运动有可能改善帕金森病(PD)患者的步态、平衡和习惯性体力活动。然而,鉴于帕金森病的异质性,患者对运动干预的反应可能各不相同。决定运动干预反应的因素仍不明确:为了解决这一不确定性,我们对具有高度挑战性的平衡和步态干预(HiBalance)在帕金森病患者中的反应进行了研究:39名轻度-中度帕金森病患者接受了我们随机对照试验中的HiBalance干预。我们定义了三个领域的反应:(1)基于迷你测试的平衡;(2)基于步速的步态;以及(3)基于加速度计得出的每日步数的体力活动。在每个领域中,我们根据干预前与干预后的变化情况,探讨了三种响应水平:高、低或无响应者。每个响应者领域都有独立的随机森林对这些响应水平进行分类,并确定变量的重要性:结果:只有平衡领域的随机森林对所有响应度进行了分类,高于科恩卡帕(Cohen's kappa)显示的 "轻微 "一致的机会水平。不同反应性水平的变量重要性各不相同。步态速度慢表示平衡领域的高响应者,但低响应者和无响应者的概率较低。对于低响应者和无响应者来说,跌倒史或未跌倒分别更为重要:在三个应答者领域和应答水平中,我们可以对平衡领域的应答者进行中度分类,但不能对步态或体力活动领域的应答者进行分类。这可以为针对帕金森病患者平衡能力的个性化干预研究的纳入标准提供指导。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
7.50%
发文量
218
期刊介绍: Movement Disorders Clinical Practice- is an online-only journal committed to publishing high quality peer reviewed articles related to clinical aspects of movement disorders which broadly include phenomenology (interesting case/case series/rarities), investigative (for e.g- genetics, imaging), translational (phenotype-genotype or other) and treatment aspects (clinical guidelines, diagnostic and treatment algorithms)
期刊最新文献
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