Franciotta Michele, Maestri Roberto, Ortelli Paola, Ferrazzoli Davide, Mastalli Federica, Frazzitta Giuseppe
Department of Parkinson's Disease, Movement Disorders and Brain Injury Rehabilitation, Moriggia Pelascini" Hospital, Gravedona ed Uniti, Italy.
Istituti Clinici Scientifici Maugeri IRCCS, Department of Biomedical Engineering of the Montescano Institute, Italy.
Parkinsons Dis. 2019 Nov 3;2019:4561830. doi: 10.1155/2019/4561830. eCollection 2019.
Hand functionality and finger dexterity are impaired in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). These disturbances lead to a dependency in activities of daily living (ADL) and poor quality of life (QoL).
We aimed to evaluate whether a specific occupational therapy (OT) program is effective in improving finger and hand dexterity and its impact on ADL in PD patients.
We retrospectively studied PD patients, hospitalized for a 4-week multidisciplinary intensive rehabilitation treatment (MIRT) between January 2015 and June 2018. All patients underwent 1 h/day OT treatment, 5 days a week. The primary outcome measure was the O'Connor finger dexterity test; secondary outcome measures were the Minnesota dexterity test, UPDRS II, and Self-Assessment Parkinson's Disease Disability Scale (SPDDS). These measures were assessed at admission (T0) and discharge (T1).
Based on the Hoehn and Yahr scale (H&Y), patients were divided into two groups: 262 subjects in H&Y stage <3 (early-stage PD patients) and 220 in H&Y stage ≥3 (medium-advanced stage PD patients). As expected, at baseline, all measures were worse in higher H&Y stages. After treatment, both groups experienced significant improvements in all outcomes. Significant differences between early-stage and medium-advanced stage PD patients were observed only for the changes in UPDRS II, with a better improvement in patients in H&Y stage ≥3.
We showed that PD patients who underwent a rehabilitation protocol including OT experienced improvements in finger dexterity and hand functionality. Our results underline the relevance of OT in improving autonomy and QoL in PD patients.
帕金森病(PD)患者存在手部功能和手指灵活性受损的情况。这些功能障碍导致患者在日常生活活动(ADL)中产生依赖,并降低生活质量(QoL)。
我们旨在评估特定的职业治疗(OT)方案是否能有效改善PD患者的手指和手部灵活性及其对ADL的影响。
我们回顾性研究了2015年1月至2018年6月期间因进行为期4周的多学科强化康复治疗(MIRT)而住院的PD患者。所有患者每周接受5天、每天1小时的OT治疗。主要结局指标是奥康纳手指灵活性测试;次要结局指标是明尼苏达灵活性测试、统一帕金森病评定量表第二部分(UPDRS II)和帕金森病自我评估残疾量表(SPDDS)。这些指标在入院时(T0)和出院时(T1)进行评估。
根据Hoehn和Yahr量表(H&Y),患者被分为两组:262名处于H&Y分期<3期的受试者(早期PD患者)和220名处于H&Y分期≥3期的受试者(中晚期PD患者)。正如预期的那样,在基线时,所有指标在较高的H&Y分期中表现更差。治疗后,两组在所有结局指标上均有显著改善。仅在UPDRS II的变化方面观察到早期和中晚期PD患者之间存在显著差异,H&Y分期≥3期的患者改善更为明显。
我们表明,接受包括OT在内的康复方案的PD患者在手指灵活性和手部功能方面有改善。我们的结果强调了OT在改善PD患者自主性和生活质量方面的重要性。