At a glance
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A New Smartphone-based Wearable Telerehabilitation System for People With Parkinson's Disease
In Brief
An observational study evaluating Smartphone-based balance exercises for Parkinson Disease. Completed, enrolled 9 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
Parkinson's disease (PD), one of the most common neurological disorders, affects at least 10 million people worldwide. The cardinal motor impairments are tremor, bradykinesia, muscle rigidity, and postural instability. While dopaminergic medication and surgical treatment have been shown to suppress tremor, bradykinesia, and muscle rigidity, they do not prevent the progression of the disease or effectively treat postural instability. The latter impairment, which often leads to frequent falls, substantially restricts motor performance and daily activities. PD is commonly managed in outpatient neurology or movement disorder clinics. Clinical studies have shown that physical and balance rehabilitation regimens supervised by physical therapists can improve postural stability in people with PD for short (hours to days) and long (weeks to months) periods. Cost, limited availability of physical therapists, etc., however, often prohibit many people with PD from undertaking such regimens. Evidence is mounting that periodic and continuous exercising is important for people with PD who are under care at home. Nevertheless, when given a rehabilitation regimen to practice at home, compliance (i.e., adherence) and engagement generally decrease in the absence of real-time therapeutic feedback. The PI has developed a smartphone-based, wearable balance rehabilitation system, known as the Smarter Balance System (SBS), which supplies real-time feedback to people with PD practicing balance rehabilitation regimens at home. The objectives of this study are to assess and compare the results of long-term rehabilitative balance training for people with PD performing in-home balance training regimens with assistive guidance via the SBS (intervention group) to people following a typical paper-based regimen (control group). The carry-over effects of long-term rehabilitative training by the intervention group and the control group on static/dynamic balance performance, daily activities, and confidence in less fear of falling are analyzed quantitatively and qualitatively.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
A smartphone-based wearable telerehabilitation system will provide video and audio instructions on how to perform in-home dynamic weight-shifting balance exercises (i.e., physical therapists' recommended dynamic balance exercises).