| Literature DB >> 35206982 |
Roberto Di Marco1,2,3, Francesca Pistonesi1, Valeria Cianci1, Roberta Biundo1,4, Luca Weis1, Lucrezia Tognolo2,3, Alfonc Baba3, Maria Rubega2, Giovanni Gentile1, Chiara Tedesco1, Miryam Carecchio1, Angelo Antonini1, Stefano Masiero2,3.
Abstract
The main objective of this study is to test the effect of thermal aquatic exercise on motor symptoms and quality of life in people with Parkinson's Disease (PD). Fourteen participants with diagnosis of idiopathic PD completed the whole rehabilitation session and evaluation protocol (Hoehn and Yahr in OFF state: 2-3; Mini Mental State Examination >24; stable pharmacological treatment in the 3 months prior participating in the study). Cognitive and motor status, functional abilities and quality of life were assessed at baseline and after an intensive rehabilitation program in thermal water (12 sessions of 45 min in a 1.4 m depth pool at 32-36 ∘C). The Mini Balance Evaluation System Test (Mini-BESTest) and the PD Quality of Life Questionnaire (PDQ-39) were considered as main outcomes. Secondary assessment measures evaluated motor symptoms and quality of life and psychological well-being. Participants kept good cognitive and functional status after treatment. Balance of all the participants significantly improved (Mini-BESTest: p<0.01). The PDQ-39 significantly improved after rehabilitation (p=0.038), with significance being driven by dimensions strongly related to motor status. Thermal aquatic exercise may represent a promising rehabilitation tool to prevent the impact of motor symptoms on daily-life activities of people with PD. PDQ-39 improvement foreshows good effects of the intervention on quality of life and psychological well-being.Entities:
Keywords: Parkinson’s disease; aquatic therapy; motion analysis; physical therapy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35206982 PMCID: PMC8871929 DOI: 10.3390/healthcare10020368
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Healthcare (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9032
Figure 1Evaluation protocol timeline.
Thermal water exercise protocol.
| Exercise Block | Description | Progression | Time | Repetition | Recovery |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Walking forward and backward | The 1st/2nd week it can be performed close to the wall | 5 min | - | 1 min between each exercise |
| Side stepping | N/A | 2 min | - | ||
| Walking on the toes | N/A | 2 min | - | ||
|
| With participant sitting on a floating tubular and the physiotherapist standing behind him/her, participant performs a slow rocking movement side-to-side or front to back | N/A | 2 min per direction | - | No rest |
| Single-leg standing on each foot (starting from a gradually narrowing base of support) | The 1st/2nd week it can be performed close to the wall | 1 min per foot | 3 per exercise | No rest | |
| With both feet together and holding a flotation board, the trunk has to be turned in anterior-posterior and medial-lateral directions | N/A | 15 min | - | No rest | |
| The therapist stands in front of the patient. She/he is asked to touch the therapist’s foot with her/his own foot | N/A | ||||
|
| Stretch arms and leg with the help of the wall | N/A | 5 min | - | No rest |
| Supine position to relax muscles | N/A | 5 min | - |
Social and demographic characteristic at the baseline. Data are given as median values with 1st and 3rd quartiles (25- and 75-percentile, respectively, Q1 and Q3), or as frequencies (N, %).
| PD Sample ( | |
|---|---|
| Age (years) | 70.5 [68.0–75.0] |
| Gender (male) | 10 (71%) |
| Height (cm) | 169.5 [165.0–170.8] |
| Body mass (kg) | 72.5 [62.4–83.8] |
| BMI (kg/m | 26.9 [23.0–29.3] |
| Education (years) | 13.0 [10.0–15.3] |
| Age at disease onset (years) | 62.0 [55.5–65.0] |
| Disease duration (years) | 10.0 [6.0–12.5] |
| LEDD (mg/die) | 770.0 [642.6–910.0] |
| DAED (mg/die) | 131.0 [65.3–197.5] |
| H & Y | 2 [2–3] |
| MMSE | 29.0 [29.0–30.0] |
| Freezing of Gait | 7 (50%) |
| Tremor | 11 (78.6%) |
| Camptocormia | 4 (28.6%) |
| Pisa syndrome | 4 (28.6%) |
Baseline and follow-up 1 evaluations. Data are given as median values with 1st and 3rd quartiles (25- and 75-percentile, respectively, Q1 and Q3). p-values calculated with the t-test are highlighted with a , the others are calculated with the Wilcoxon test. An * denotes statistical significance after Bonferroni correction (i.e., ).
| Baseline | Follow-Up 1 | Cohen’s | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 23.85 [22.6–25.4] | 24.98 [23.9–26.0] | 0.159 | 0.2100 | |
|
| 6.0 [6.0–6.0] | 6.0 [6.0–6.0] | NA | NA |
|
| 5.0 [5.0–5.8] | 5.0 [5.0–5.8] | NA | NA |
|
| 1.0 [0.0–1.0] | 0.0 [0.0–1.0] | 0.369 | 0.3150 |
|
| 26.5 [18.3–39.8] | 18.5 [13.3–34.5] |
|
|
|
| 6.5 [3.3–12.3] | 3.0 [1.0–11.8] |
|
|
|
| 4.5 [2.3–6.0] | 3.0 [0.5–4.0] |
|
|
|
| 3.0 [0.0–7.0] | 2.0 [0.0–8.0] | 0.225 | 0.8490 |
|
| 21.0 [12.0–33.8] | 12.0 [11.0–16.0] |
|
|
|
| 18.0 [15.0–20.0] | 21 [20.0–23.8] |
|
|
|
| 4.0 [3.0–5.0] | 4.5 [4.0–5.0] | 0.426 | 0.1540 |
|
| 2.0 [0.0–3.0] | 3.0 [2.0–3.8] | 0.590 | 0.0600 |
|
| 6.0 [6.0–6.0] | 6.0 [6.0–6.0] | 0.117 | 1.0000 |
|
| 6.0 [5.0–7.8] | 8.0 [7.0–9.0] |
|
|
|
| 9.7 [9.0–12.0] | 8.9 [7.6–10.8] |
|
|
|
| 12.2 [10.3–19.3] | 10.7 [9.0–12.2] |
|
|
|
| 13.5 [9.9–23.7] | 12.9 [10.4–17.7] | 0.523 | 0.1200 |
|
| 531.5 [420.0–692.5] | 600.0 [470.0–670.0] |
|
|
Figure 2Forest plots highlighting the differences between baseline and follow-up visits for: (a) the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), Parkinson’s Disease Cognitive Functional Rating Scale (PD-CFRS) and New Freezing of Gait questionnaire (N-FOG); (b) Parkinson’s Disease Questionnaire (PDQ-39) total score and subscores; and (c) Mini-BESTest (total score and subitems), the MDS-Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS) part III, the Six Minute Walk Distance (6MWD), and Timed Up and Go (TUG). Statistical differences are highlighted by the *.
Figure 3Box plots and spaghetti plots for: (a) the Parkinson’s Disease Questionnaire (PDQ-39) total score and Mobility and Activities of Daily Living (ADL) subscores; and the motor scales and tests that highlighted significant differences between baseline and follow-up visits, i.e., (b) the Mini-BESTest total score and the Reactive Postural Control (RPC) and Gait subscores; (c) the Timed Up and Go in single-task, cognitive dual-task, and motor dual-task duration; and (d) the six minute walk distance in meters (6MWD) and the Movement Disorders Society Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale—Part III score (MDS-UPDRS part III). Statistics is also reported on the box plots.
Figure A1Spaghetti plot for the Montreal Cognitive Assessment scale (MoCA), the Parkinson’s Disease Questionnaire (PDQ-39), the Movement Disorders Society Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale—Part III score (MDS-UPDRS Part III), and the Mini-BESTest total score for those participants assessed at the three time points (baseline, follow-up 1 immediately after the rehabilitation program and follow-up 2 after 1 month). Black lines, spots and numbers highlight the median values of the sub-sample (6 participants).