Parkinson Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Wearable Real-Time Feedback System to Improve Gait and Posture in Parkinson's Disease
Progressive gait dysfunction is one of the main motor symptoms in people with Parkinson's
disease (PD). It is generally expressed as reduced step length and gait speed, and as
increased variability in step time and length. People with PD also exhibit stooped posture,
which besides apparent disfigurement, also disrupts gait. The gait and posture impairments
are usually resistant to the pharmacological treatment, worsen as the disease progresses,
increase the likelihood of falls, and result in higher rates of hospitalization and
mortality. These impairments may be caused by perceptual (spatial awareness) difficulties due
to deficiency in processing information related to movement initiation and execution, which
can result in misperceptions of the actual effort required to perform a desired movement and
posture. Due to this, people with PD often depend on external cues during motor tasks.
Although numerous studies have shown that cues can improve gait in PD, they did not provide
feedback of the performance in real-time which is crucial to perceive, modulate, and achieve
the desired movements. There are a few studies that provided real-time feedback using
treadmill-based systems and observed improvements in gait in PD, however, they are not
suitable for practicing target movements conveniently during free-living conditions, which
can strongly reinforce movement patterns and improve clinical outcomes. There has been very
little investigations of wearable real-time feedback (WRTF) systems to improve gait and
posture in PD. The investigators are aware of only one study that tried to improve gait using
a wearable system with real-time feedback capabilities, but the study did not provide any
feedback on posture. Also, some of the parameters used for feedback were not easy to perceive
and modulate in real-time.
Based on the investigators' recent success with a treadmill-based real-time feedback system
which improved gait and posture in people with PD, the proposed study will develop a WRTF
system, validate its performance with gold standard measures from a motion capture system,
and test its feasibility in a group of people with mild to moderate PD. The most novel
aspects of the proposed system are that it will provide feedback on parameters such as step
length, arm swing, step time, and upright posture which have been greatly affected in PD and
shown to increase the risk factors for balance disorders and falls. In addition, the system
will consists of two types of feedback: a Continuous Feedback (CF) mode and an On-Demand
Feedback (ODF) mode. The CF mode will help users learn and practice desired gait and posture
movements and the ODF mode will help to maintain them during activities of daily living. The
gait and posture performances during feedback and non-feedback conditions will be compared
and, if the expected benefits are observed, a follow-up randomized clinical trial will be
performed to test the effectiveness of this novel technology during daily activities.
After validation of the proposed wearable real-time feedback (WRTF) system, the feasibility
of utilizing this system to provide RTF of gait and posture parameters will be tested in a
single group of twenty-six people with mild to moderate Parkinson's disease (PD). The sample
size was chosen to observe an intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC (2,1)) value between
0.75 and 0.9 at alpha = 0.05 and power of 80%. Subjects of all races and both genders will be
recruited. Despite higher representation of males in PD, the investigators will seek to
achieve an equal distribution of males and females. As the incidence of PD increases with
age, rising after the age of 55 years with a sharp increase after 60 years, the investigators
will recruit participants between the ages of 50-80 years.
After enrollment, each subject will participate in one screening and clinical evaluation
session at Muhammad Ali Parkinson Center (MAPC) at St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center
(SJHMC) in Phoenix, AZ and all the experimental data collection sessions will be performed at
the Arizona State University (ASU), Tempe, AZ. The 3 experimental data collection sessions
will be (1) Validity Session, (2) Continuous feedback (CF) Mode Session, and (3) On-demand
feedback (ODF) Mode session. All the screening, clinical evaluation, experimental data
collection sessions will be carried out during subject's "medication-on" state (when the
medication best controls symptoms of PD, usually 60-90 minutes after the subjects' usual dose
of anti-parkinsonian medication). The order of CF and ODF mode sessions will be randomized
across the subjects.
Screening and Clinical Evaluation Session (~ 2 hours): In this session, first the subjects
will be screened by Dr. Shill for the eligibility criteria which includes UPDRS evaluation.
If they are eligible, their balance and cognitive status will be evaluated using the
Mini-Balance Evaluation Systems Test (Mini-BESTest) and the Scales for Outcomes of Parkinson'
Disease-Cognition (SCOPA-Cog) respectively. The Mini-BESTest has been shown to detect even
subtle balance deficits in people with PD. SCOPA-Cog is a PD-specific scale that tests
non-verbal and verbal memory, learning, attention, and executive function, including complex
motor planning, working memory, and verbal fluency and has undergone extensive clinimetric
testing.
WRTF Concurrent Validity Session (SA1) (~ 2 hours): In this session, MIMU sensors will be
placed on the lower legs, wrists, lower back, and upper back. Lightweight reflective markers
will be placed according to the full-body marker setup (Vicon Motion Systems, Ltd, UK) and
specialized software (Nexus 2.3, Vicon) will be used for kinematic assessment. Participants
will be asked to complete twenty 15-meter overground walking trials at their self-selected
comfortable speed. From the steady state segments of these trials, the gait events,
spatio-temporal gait indices (including step length, step time, arm swing, and back angle)
will be calculated in real-time for each step using the WRTF system (as described in earlier
sections), and will be compared against the gold standard values obtained from Vicon system.
Continuous Feedback Mode Session (SA2) (~ 3 hours): In this session, RTF will be provided for
the participant to practice walking with increased step length, arm swing, upright posture
and regular step time. All the walking trials will be performed overground and feedback of
only one parameter will be provided at a given time/trial. Various step-to-step
spatio-temporal gait and posture measures will be obtained using the WRTF system.
First, the participants will be asked to walk at their self-selected speed for one 80-meter
trial (with a 180 degree turn at 40-meter) in a long hallway to determine their baseline gait
measures (including step length, arm swing, step time, and back angle). Then, the subjects
will perform one 80-meter trial stepping on visual cues - strips placed on the floor at equal
intervals, to obtain the step length target template (described in the 'Continuous Feedback
Mode' section). Next, the subjects will be asked to walk two 80-meter trials during which
they will be provided with RTF of their step length performance (their current movements in a
sound form and specific instructions through conducting ear phones). Following this,
participants will perform one 80-meter trial following a metronome to obtain the step time
target template which will be followed by two 80-meter trials during which RTF of their step
time will be provided to improve gait rhythmicity. Similarly, the trials for arm swing and
upright posture will be performed as follows: one 80-meter trial (walking with bigger arm
swings) to obtain the arm swing target template, two 80-meter trials providing RTF of arm
swing performance, one 80-meter trial (walking upright) to obtain the uprightness target
template, and two 80-meter trials providing RTF of upright posture.
On-Demand Feedback Mode Session (SA3) (~ 3 hours): This session will evaluate the use of
on-demand feedback. After wearing the sensors of the WRTF system and ear phones, the subjects
will perform one baseline 100-meter trial without feedback at their self-selected comfortable
speed. Then, the subjects will participate in eight 100-meter trials with a 180 degree turn
at 50-meters, of which, two trials will be performed with each type of feedback (step length,
step time, arm swing, or upright posture). Spatio-temporal gait indices will be calculated
from non-feedback and feedback trials. Sufficient rest periods will be provided between the
trials.
Primary and Secondary Outcome Measures: The main primary outcomes will be intra-class
correlation (ICC) and reliability coefficients (RC) to test the validity of the WRTF system.
The other primary measures will be step length and time and their variability, arm swing, and
upright posture. Also, correlations between cognitive status and balance control and ability
to follow RTF will be explored.
Data and Statistical Analyses: For gait, mean values of step/stride length, asymmetry,
variability in step length and time, gait speed, swing time, double support duration, and
gait related items of clinical scores will be calculated. The posture control measures will
include back angle during walking trials and time duration of maintaining different balance
tasks during Mini-BESTest evaluation. Concurrent (criterion-related) validity between the two
systems (WRTF vs. Vicon) will be analyzed with ICC (2,1) and RC. The effect of RTF (CF and
ODF) on each primary measure will be assessed using paired t-tests. The difference in the
degree of improvements between CF and ODF modes will also be compared by the application of
paired t-test on the changes in gait and posture measures between respective feedback trials
and baseline trials. For conditions violating normality, Wilcoxon signed-rank test will be
used.
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