| Literature DB >> 30154990 |
Lois Rosenthal1, Dean Sweeney2,3, Anne-Louise Cunnington1,4, Leo R Quinlan3,5, Gearóid ÓLaighin2,3.
Abstract
Introduction: Freezing of gait (FoG) is a movement abnormality that presents with advancing Parkinson's disease (PD) and is one of the most debilitating symptoms of the disease. The mainstay of nonpharmacological management of FoG is typically through external cueing techniques designed to relieve or prevent the freezing episode. Previous work shows that electrical stimulation may prove useful as a gait guidance technique, but further evidence is required. The main objective of this study was to determine whether a "fixed" rhythmic sensory electrical stimulation (sES) cueing strategy would significantly (i) reduce the time taken to complete a walking task and (ii) reduce the number of FoG episodes occurring when performing the task.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30154990 PMCID: PMC6092973 DOI: 10.1155/2018/4684925
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Healthc Eng ISSN: 2040-2295 Impact factor: 2.682
Figure 1Utilized sES rhythmic cueing strategy.
Walking tasks identified by the participants and common features.
| Index | Walking task |
|---|---|
| P1 | Walk from the living room to the kitchen and move the kettle from counter to counter, walk to the front door, open and close the door, and walk to the kitchen then to the front door and finally to the living room. |
|
| |
| P2 | Walk from the living room to the kitchen sink and then to the bedroom and sit on the bed. |
|
| |
| P3 | Walk from the living room to the back door, walk through a narrow path to the front door, and finally walk to the living room. |
|
| |
| P4 | Walk from the living room to the kitchen, walk upstairs into the bedroom, turn at window, and walk downstairs and back to the living room. |
|
| |
| P5 | Walk from the living room to the toilet, then walk to the bedroom, walk to the kitchen, and finally walk to the living room. |
|
| |
| P6 | Stand and walk from the living room to the toilet, then sit and stand, walk out to the corridor and turn, and walk back to the living room and sit on chair. |
|
| |
| P7 | Walk from the living room to the bedroom, then walk to the kitchen, walk to the spare room, and finally return to the living room. |
|
| |
| P8 | Walk from the living room upstairs into the study room, then walk to the bedroom and bathroom, and walk downstairs and back to the living room. |
|
| |
| P9 | Walk from the living room to the kitchen, and then walk to the bathroom and back to the living room. |
Participants' results of testing, time to complete task, number of FoG episodes occurring, and percentage of reduction.
| Time (s) to complete task (number of FoG episodes occurring) | Reduction (%) in time to complete task (reduction (%) in the number of FoG episodes occurring) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Control | Cueing | Cueing | |
| P1 | 86.18 (8) | 79.8 (6) | 7.4% (25%) |
| P2 | 93.32 (10) | 85.36 (6) | 8.53% (40%) |
| P3 | 66 (3) | 59.1 (0) | 10.45% (100%) |
| P4 | 103.9 (8) | 70.2 (2) | 32.44% (75%) |
| P5 | 112 (4) | 81 (1) | 27.68% (75%) |
| P6 | 86.4 (3) | 80.7 (1) | 6.60% (66.7%) |
| P7 | 113.8 (7) | 106.3 (4) | 6.59% (42.86%) |
| P8 | 178.4 (1) | 173.9 (0) | 2.52% (100%) |
| P9 | 51.26 (0) | 38 (0) | 25.87% (0%) |
| Mean (SD) | 99.03 ± 36.12 (4.89 ± 3.48) | 86.04 ± 37.92 (2.22 ± 2.49) | 14.23 ± 11.15% (58.28 ± 33.89%) |
Figure 2Rhythm of “fixed” sES and synced step rate of participants (700 ms).