Reactive stepping can be improved in people with Parkinson's Disease (PwPD). However, there is variability in the responsiveness to such training. This study examined if cognition could predict the responsiveness of PwPD to a two-week reactive step training intervention. 25 PwPD (70.52 years ± 7.15; Hoehn & Yahr range 1-3) at risk for falls completed a multiple baseline, open-label, uncontrolled pre-post intervention study. Reactive stepping was trained through a two-week (six-session) intervention with repeated support surface translations. Stepping performance was measured at two baseline assessments (B1 and B2), immediately after the intervention (P1), and two months after training (P2). Primary stepping outcomes were anterior-posterior margin of stability (MOS), step length, and step latency during backward steps. The primary aim assessed whether global cognition (Scales for Outcomes in Parkinson's Disease-Cognition - SCOPA-COG, & Montreal Cognitive Assessment - MoCA) was related to two-month retention of improvements in reactive stepping after practice. The secondary aim explored whether specific cognitive domains predicted retained stepping improvements, including attention/working memory, executive function, language, memory, and visuospatial function. Greater baseline global cognition was related to better two-month retention of step length improvements (SCOPA-COG: p = 0.002, f = 0.31; MoCA: p = 0.002, f = 0.38). However, only SCOPA-COG retained statistical significance after p-value adjustment for multiple comparisons (p = 0.04). Optimal cut-point analysis revealed that a SCOPA-COG threshold of 31 or higher was optimal for identifying individuals likely to retain improvement. Specific cognitive domains did not predict changes in reactive stepping outcomes. Participants with greater baseline global cognition, particularly as measured by SCOPA-COG, demonstrated greater retention of improvements in reactive stepping. In this cohort, a SCOPA-COG threshold of 31 could predict individuals likely to benefit from the intervention. These findings highlight the potential of cognitive screening to identify people more or less likely to benefit from reactive balance training.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neulet.2023.137517 | DOI Listing |
J Neurol
December 2024
Division of Physiotherapy, Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences and Society, Karolinska Institutet, Huddinge, Sweden.
Background: Postural instability is considered a late complication of Parkinson's disease (PD). However, growing evidence shows that balance and gait problems may occur early in the disease.
Objective: To describe balance, gait, and falls/near falls in persons with newly diagnosed, untreated PD ("de novo"), and to compare this with persons with mild-moderate PD (Later PD).
Proc Biol Sci
December 2024
Physical Therapy and Human Movement Sciences, Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL 60611, USA.
People use the mechanical interplay between stability and manoeuvrability to successfully walk. During single-limb support, body states (position and velocity) that increase in lateral stability will inherently resist lateral manoeuvres, decrease medial stability and facilitate medial manoeuvres. Although not well understood, people can make behavioural decisions exploiting this relationship in anticipation of perturbations or direction changes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Psychiatry
December 2024
School of Public Health, Centre for Psycho-Oncology Research and Training, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China.
Background: Psychological distress often co-occurs with sleep disturbances; but the specific mechanisms linking the two remain unclear. A qualitative study explored perceptions and factors associated with sleep disturbances in cancer survivors between patients with varying levels of psychological distress.
Methods: Thirty-three Cantonese speaking mixed type cancer survivors were recruited from a community cancer care program.
Exp Gerontol
December 2024
Radboud University Medical Center, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behavior, Department of Rehabilitation, Nijmegen, the Netherlands; Sint Maartenskliniek Research, Nijmegen, the Netherlands.
Background: Perturbation-based training improves reactive stepping responses to prevent falling following a loss-of-balance. As there is currently no safe and feasible method for home-based practice, this randomized study investigated whether action observation with motor simulation (AOMS) of balance recovery improves reactive stepping in older adults with a history of falls. Additionally, we evaluated whether effects differ between AOMS of a human actor in the same experimental context or of an avatar in a virtual world.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngew Chem Int Ed Engl
November 2024
Key Lab of Mesoscopic Chemistry, School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Nanjing University, Nanjing, 210023, China.
We report here an electrocatalyst that exhibits superior performance in the electrooxidation of ethanol. The reactive centers of the catalyst have a nest-type configuration with outer Zn-NC nest covering inner PtZn intermetallic compound nanoparticles loaded on carbon support (ZnNC⊂PtZn/C). The high-energy stepped facets of the inner PtZn nanoparticles confined and shaped by the outer Zn-NC nest is highly active for the critical C-C bond cleavage of ethanol in oxidation, confirmed by experimental characterizations and density functional theory calculations.
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