National Institute for Health and Care Research, Exeter Biomedical Research Centre, College of Medicine and Health, University of Exeter, Exeter, United Kingdom.
Postgraduate Program in Rehabilitation Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of São Paulo, São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil.
PLoS One. 2024 Aug 29;19(8):e0309217. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0309217. eCollection 2024.
People with Parkinson's disease (PwPD) present motor alterations which can impact daily life tasks that require speed and/or accuracy of movement.
A sub analysis of NCT01439022, aiming to estimate the extent to which two different exercise training protocols (global and handwriting upper limb exercise training) impact reaction time, travel speed, and accuracy in PwPD.
Seventy PwPD, right-side dominant were randomised 1:1 into two six-month training protocol groups; 35 PwPD performed global exercise training and 35 performed specific training (handwriting upper limb exercise movements). Assessments of speed-accuracy and trade-off were carried out at baseline, after 3 and 6 months of training, and at a 12-month follow-up. The current study used data from a previous publication of a randomised controlled trial that included a 6-month self-managed community exercise programme for PwPD. For the present study we included only the participants who completed the Fitts' task during the baseline assessment.
In the upper limb assessments, no main effects were found for the number of touches, but the exercise group showed a marginal increase over time on the left side. Error averages on the left side decreased significantly for the exercise group from baseline to 6 and 12 months. The exercise group also presented a lower Error CoV and the Reaction Time CoV increased on the right side. Significant findings for Fitts r on the left side indicated lower values for the exercise group, with improvements continuing at 12 months.
We report the potential of global exercise interventions to facilitate improvements in reaction time and travel speed, as well as other motor control metrics, with lasting effects at 12 months, particularly on the non-dominant side.
帕金森病(PD)患者存在运动改变,可能影响需要速度和/或运动准确性的日常任务。
对 NCT01439022 的一项子分析,旨在估计两种不同的运动训练方案(全身和手部上肢运动训练)对 PD 患者反应时间、运动速度和准确性的影响程度。
70 名右侧优势的 PD 患者被随机分为两组,每组 1:1,分别进行为期 6 个月的训练方案;35 名 PD 患者进行全身运动训练,35 名患者进行特定训练(手部上肢运动训练)。在基线、训练 3 个月和 6 个月以及 12 个月随访时,对速度-准确性和权衡进行评估。本研究使用了先前发表的一项随机对照试验的数据集,该试验包括一项针对 PD 患者的 6 个月自我管理社区运动计划。本研究仅纳入了在基线评估中完成 Fitts 任务的参与者。
在上肢评估中,触摸次数没有主要影响,但运动组在左侧显示出随时间的边际增加。从基线到 6 个月和 12 个月,运动组左侧的平均误差显著降低。运动组的误差变异系数(Error CoV)也较低,右侧的反应时间变异系数(Reaction Time CoV)增加。左侧 Fitts r 的显著发现表明,运动组的数值较低,12 个月时仍有改善。
我们报告了全身运动干预的潜力,可以改善反应时间和运动速度,以及其他运动控制指标,且在 12 个月时具有持久效果,特别是在非优势侧。