2018
DOI: 10.1155/2018/5614242
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Instrumental or Physical-Exercise Rehabilitation of Balance Improves Both Balance and Gait in Parkinson’s Disease

Abstract: We hypothesised that rehabilitation specifically addressing balance in Parkinson's disease patients might improve not only balance but locomotion as well. Two balance-training protocols (standing on a moving platform and traditional balance exercises) were assessed by assigning patients to two groups (Platform, n = 15, and Exercises, n = 17). The platform moved periodically in the anteroposterior, laterolateral, and oblique direction, with and without vision in different trials. Balance exercises were based on… Show more

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Cited by 53 publications
(47 citation statements)
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“…In the future, it might be interesting also to validate our model with accelerometers that offer a series of advantages such as lower cost and applicability in free-living situations. However, right now we believe it is important to have a model usable with electronic walkways since they are still frequently used in scientific studies and clinical practice [7,[65][66][67][68].…”
Section: Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In the future, it might be interesting also to validate our model with accelerometers that offer a series of advantages such as lower cost and applicability in free-living situations. However, right now we believe it is important to have a model usable with electronic walkways since they are still frequently used in scientific studies and clinical practice [7,[65][66][67][68].…”
Section: Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Page 2 of 18 Arcolin et al BioMed Eng OnLine (2019) 18:70 Electronic walkways are an easy instrument for assessing gait that provide a large number of spatiotemporal variables of gait. Even if these systems are expensive and led to evaluate gait only in the laboratory context, they have been often used to assess gait of patients with PD in clinical practice [6][7][8][9]. In particular, the GAITRite ® system was demonstrated to be a reliable instrument [10] and showed an excellent concurrent validity for measuring individual footstep data [11].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Gait organization per se would be instead unimpaired, as inferred from normal muscle activation patterns in the lower extremities during turns in people with PD [ 134 ]. Most interestingly, we observed recently in a different cohort of PD patients that walking speed increased after a rehabilitation training exclusively aimed at improving balance [ 135 ]. This suggests that better equilibrium control has a positive effect on walking—or that the subtle walking abnormalities exhibited by the present PD patients are a sign of balance, not gait impairment.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Patients with Parkinson's disease show minor adaptation problems that can contribute to their balance dysfunction [8,85,102]. A balance training with a continuous, predictable translation of the support base has improved their balance and coordination capacities as much as training based on standardized exercises [103]. Interestingly, gait speed was also improved in both cases.…”
Section: Rehabilitationmentioning
confidence: 99%