Ha Jongmok, Park Jung Hyun, Lee Jun Seok, Kim Hye Young, Song Ji One, Yoo Jiwon, Ahn Jong Hyeon, Youn Jinyoung, Cho Jin Whan
Department of Neurology, Samsung Medical Center, Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
Neuroscience Center, Samsung Medical Center, Seoul, Korea.
J Mov Disord. 2024 Apr;17(2):189-197. doi: 10.14802/jmd.23251. Epub 2024 Feb 29.
Exercise can improve both motor and nonmotor symptoms in people with Parkinson's disease (PwP), but there is an unmet need for accessible and sustainable exercise options. This study aimed to evaluate the effect, feasibility, and safety of a regularly performed live-streaming tele-exercise intervention for PwP.
A live-streaming exercise intervention for PwP was implemented twice a week for 12 weeks. We measured the motor and nonmotor symptom scores of the included patients before and after the intervention. Changes in clinical scores from baseline to postintervention were analyzed using paired t-tests. Factors associated with improvements in clinical scores and compliance were analyzed using Pearson's correlation analysis.
Fifty-six participants were enrolled in the study. There were significant improvements in Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS)-anxiety (p = 0.007), HADS-depression (p < 0.001), Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) part III (p < 0.001), UPDRS total (p = 0.015), Hoehn and Yahr stage (p = 0.027), and Parkinson's Disease Fatigue Scale-16 (p = 0.026) scores after the intervention. Improvements in motor symptoms were associated with improvements in mood symptoms and fatigue. Higher motor impairment at baseline was associated with a greater compliance rate and better postintervention composite motor and nonmotor outcomes (ΔUPDRS total score). Overall, the 12-week tele-exercise program was feasible and safe for PwP. No adverse events were reported. The overall adherence rate was 60.0% in our cohort, and 83.4% of the participants were able to participate in more than half of the exercise routines.
The live-streaming tele-exercise intervention is a safe, feasible, and effective nonpharmacological treatment option that can alleviate fatigue and improve mood and motor symptoms in PwP.
运动可改善帕金森病患者(PwP)的运动和非运动症状,但对于可及且可持续的运动方案仍存在未满足的需求。本研究旨在评估针对PwP定期进行的直播远程运动干预的效果、可行性和安全性。
对PwP实施每周两次、为期12周的直播运动干预。我们在干预前后测量了纳入患者的运动和非运动症状评分。使用配对t检验分析从基线到干预后临床评分的变化。使用Pearson相关分析分析与临床评分改善和依从性相关的因素。
56名参与者纳入本研究。干预后,医院焦虑抑郁量表(HADS)焦虑评分(p = 0.007)、HADS抑郁评分(p < 0.001)、统一帕金森病评定量表(UPDRS)第三部分(p < 0.001)、UPDRS总分(p = 0.015)、霍恩和雅尔分期(p = 0.027)以及帕金森病疲劳量表-16(p = 0.026)评分均有显著改善。运动症状的改善与情绪症状和疲劳的改善相关。基线时较高的运动障碍与更高的依从率以及更好的干预后综合运动和非运动结局(ΔUPDRS总分)相关。总体而言,为期12周的远程运动计划对PwP是可行且安全的。未报告不良事件。我们队列中的总体依从率为60.0%,83.4%的参与者能够参加超过一半的运动课程。
直播远程运动干预是一种安全、可行且有效的非药物治疗选择,可减轻PwP的疲劳并改善情绪和运动症状。