Center for the Study of Movement, Cognition and Mobility, Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, Tel Aviv, Israel.
Miriam and Sheldon G. Adelson School of Graduate Studies, Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel.
J Neurol. 2023 Mar;270(3):1388-1401. doi: 10.1007/s00415-022-11469-1. Epub 2022 Nov 11.
Motor and cognitive impairments impact the everyday functioning of people with MS (pwMS). The present randomized controlled trial (RCT) evaluated the benefits of a combined motor-cognitive virtual reality training program on key motor and cognitive symptoms and related outcomes in pwMS.
In a single-blinded, two-arm RCT, 124 pwMS were randomized into a treadmill training with virtual reality (TT + VR) group or a treadmill training alone (TT) (active-control) group. Both groups received three training sessions per week for 6 weeks. Dual-tasking gait speed and cognitive processing speed (Symbol Digit Modalities Test, SDMT, score) were the primary outcomes. Secondary outcomes included additional tests of cognitive function, mobility, and patient-reported questionnaires. These were measured before, after, and 3 months after training.
Gait speed improved (p < 0.005) in both groups, similarly, by about 10 cm/s. The TT + VR group (n = 53 analyzed per-protocol) showed a clinically meaningful improvement of 4.4 points (95% CI 1.9-6.8, p = 0.001) in SDMT, compared to an improvement of only 0.8 points in the TT (n = 51 analyzed per-protocol) group (95% CI 0.9-2.5 points, p = 0.358) (group X time interaction effect p = 0.027). Furthermore, TT + VR group-specific improvements were seen in depressive symptoms (lowered by 31%, p = 0.003), attention (17%, p < 0.001), and verbal fluency (11.6% increase, p = 0.002).
These findings suggest that both TT and TT + VR improve usual and dual-task gait in pwMS. Nonetheless, a multi-modal approach based on VR positively impacts multiple aspects of cognitive function and mental health, more than seen after treadmill-treading alone. Trial registered at ClinicalTrials.Gov NCT02427997.
运动和认知障碍会影响多发性硬化症(MS)患者的日常功能。本随机对照试验(RCT)评估了结合运动和认知虚拟现实训练方案对 MS 患者主要运动和认知症状及相关结果的益处。
在一项单盲、双臂 RCT 中,124 名 MS 患者被随机分为跑步机训练结合虚拟现实(TT+VR)组或仅跑步机训练(TT)(主动对照)组。两组均每周接受三次训练,持续 6 周。双重任务步态速度和认知处理速度(符号数字模态测试,SDMT,得分)是主要结果。次要结果包括认知功能、移动性和患者报告问卷的其他测试。这些测试在训练前、训练后和训练后 3 个月进行测量。
两组的步态速度都有所提高(p<0.005),同样,约提高了 10cm/s。与 TT 组(n=51 按方案分析)相比,TT+VR 组(n=53 按方案分析)的 SDMT 得分有显著提高 4.4 分(95%CI 1.9-6.8,p=0.001),而 TT 组仅提高 0.8 分(95%CI 0.9-2.5 分,p=0.358)(组×时间交互效应 p=0.027)。此外,TT+VR 组在抑郁症状(降低 31%,p=0.003)、注意力(17%,p<0.001)和语言流畅性(增加 11.6%,p=0.002)方面有特定的改善。
这些发现表明,TT 和 TT+VR 均可改善 MS 患者的常规和双重任务步态。尽管如此,基于 VR 的多模式方法对认知功能和心理健康的多个方面产生积极影响,超过单独跑步机锻炼的影响。试验在 ClinicalTrials.Gov 注册,NCT02427997。