Parkinson's Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Tango for Treatment of Motor and Non-motor Manifestations in Parkinson's Disease: A Randomized Control Study.
Parkinson's disease involves many motor difficulties as well as non-motor ones. Recent research has strongly suggested that exercise is very important for Parkinson's disease. We are interested especially in dance as a form of exercise, because it combines physical movements with balance tasks, social engagement, and mental stimulation. Therefore, we think dance classes may be a very beneficial exercise for Parkinson's disease; the purpose of this study is to see if Argentinean Tango classes might improve motor and non-motor manifestations of Parkinson's disease.
There is accumulating evidence for positive effects of exercise on gait speed, strength,
balance, and quality of life for people with PD. Habitual physical activity can lower risk
for developing PD. In toxin-induced animal models of PD, exercise may decrease neuronal
injury. The key components of an exercise program in PD include: 1) cueing strategies to
improve gait; 2) cognitive movement strategies to improve transfers; 3) exercises to improve
balance, and 4) training of joint mobility and muscle power to physical capacity.
Traditional exercise programs can meet these needs but often they are not very appealing for
older adults including patients with PD. Unfortunately more than half of individuals with PD
does not meet the recommended daily level physical activity.
There is a connection between music and level of Dopamine, which is pivotal for establishing
and maintaining behavior. According to recent study music-induced emotional states can
increase dopamine release, partially explaining how musical experiences are so valued and
why music is an especially potent pleasurable stimulus for most people, and is frequently
used to affect emotional states.
The development of interventions which combine exercise, with accessibility, enjoyability,
good motivation to practice regularly improving mood and stimulating cognition would be
ideal for individuals with PD. Dance may provide all of these characteristics, and so may be
an affective useful and accessible intervention to improve motor impairments. Dance requires
dynamic balance and permanent adjustment to the environment at the same time. It promotes
enjoyment and encouragement interest in continuing participation. Habitual social dancers
have superior balance, gait function, and reaction times compared with age-matched
nondancers. Regular dancing improves balance and functional mobility, and increases
motivation to continue healthful exercise-related behaviours in older adults.
There is also evidence that exercise has a positive impact on cognitive function in
vulnerable populations. Musical exercise improved cognitive function in residents of long-
term care facilitations without diagnosis of dementia and in patients with established
Alzheimer's disease. Particularly dance produces clinically important changes in measures of
mental status and behaviour in patients with moderate to severe dementia.
Social isolation is an important cause of the development of depression in the older
population and it may be caused by numbers of factors, including mobility limitations:
medical illness, and economic difficulties. The relationship between social isolation and
depression is clear, as is the link between social engagement and improved mood and
perceived quality of life. There is also an important link between social disengagement,
depression and cognitive decline in elderly population. Dance classes occur in a group
setting and it is forced social interaction, which may produce noticeable improvement in
mood and subsequently decrease cognitive decline.
There is currently an insufficient body of literature on dance for PD and much additional
work is needed. Most studies on dance in PD have used small sample sizes and assessed
short-term effects and long-term effects of dance intervention only focused in motor
manifestations of PD. Consequently, the effect of dance on cognition, mood and motivation
has not been yet explored in PD. There is insufficient literature about what type of dance
is more beneficial for motor and non-motor manifestations in PD.
Why Argentinean tango?
Better improvements of balance and complex gait were observed in elderly participants in
tango lessons compared with a walking group. Beneficial effect of Argentine tango was also
suggested, compared to traditional exercise for improving balance and functional mobility in
patients with PD. Furthermore, a positron emission tomography (PET) study has shown
increased activity in the basal ganglia when tango movements were performed with a metered
and predictable beat. Tango requires particular motor skills, including frequent initiation
and cessation, a variety of movement speeds, rhythmic variation, and spontaneous
multidirectional perturbations. These features target motor impairments with movement
initiation, turning, and bradykinesia. Interesting, tango could also effectively address
freezing of gait (FOG), because some step patterns mimic the rehabilitation exercises
designed for those with FOG. Visual cues, such as a foot to step over, can improve FOG.
Tango technique which involve stepping over a partner's foot, tapping a partner's foot, or
crossing one foot over another, are steps similar to conventional rehabilitation for FOG. In
addition, tango involves rhythmic rocking, or alternating shift of center of mass from foot
to foot, which can be another good strategy for freezing. Tango appeared to have a larger
effect on freezing compared to other styles of dancing (waltz/foxtrot). Tango involves the
practicing of control of movement speed and size, which may improve walking velocity and
stride length. It also adds slow and quick steps of varying lengths and requires continual
adjustment of these features. Tango may be especially beneficial for addressing backward
walking, a critical area given the tendency for falls in the backward direction in PD6.
Surprisingly in a recent study, tango even significantly improved upper extremity function,
which it may be reflective of a global impact of exercise on bradykinesia. Better
improvements of balance and complex gait were observed in elderly participants in tango
lessons compared with a walking group. No studies have examined the effect of tango on
cognitive function, mood and motivation in patients with PD.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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