Parkinson Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
A New Smartphone-based Wearable Telerehabilitation System for People With Parkinson's Disease
Parkinson's disease (PD), one of the most common neurological disorders, affects at least 10
million people worldwide. The cardinal motor impairments are tremor, bradykinesia, muscle
rigidity, and postural instability. While dopaminergic medication and surgical treatment have
been shown to suppress tremor, bradykinesia, and muscle rigidity, they do not prevent the
progression of the disease or effectively treat postural instability. The latter impairment,
which often leads to frequent falls, substantially restricts motor performance and daily
activities.
PD is commonly managed in outpatient neurology or movement disorder clinics. Clinical studies
have shown that physical and balance rehabilitation regimens supervised by physical
therapists can improve postural stability in people with PD for short (hours to days) and
long (weeks to months) periods. Cost, limited availability of physical therapists, etc.,
however, often prohibit many people with PD from undertaking such regimens. Evidence is
mounting that periodic and continuous exercising is important for people with PD who are
under care at home. Nevertheless, when given a rehabilitation regimen to practice at home,
compliance (i.e., adherence) and engagement generally decrease in the absence of real-time
therapeutic feedback. The PI has developed a smartphone-based, wearable balance
rehabilitation system, known as the Smarter Balance System (SBS), which supplies real-time
feedback to people with PD practicing balance rehabilitation regimens at home.
The objectives of this study are to assess and compare the results of long-term
rehabilitative balance training for people with PD performing in-home balance training
regimens with assistive guidance via the SBS (intervention group) to people following a
typical paper-based regimen (control group). The carry-over effects of long-term
rehabilitative training by the intervention group and the control group on static/dynamic
balance performance, daily activities, and confidence in less fear of falling are analyzed
quantitatively and qualitatively.
This study examines static/dynamic balance performance, daily activities, and confidence in
less fear of falling for people with Parkinson's disease (PD) performing in-home balance
exercises with a smartphone-based wearable telerehabilitation system (intervention group)
compared to typical paper-based balance exercises (control group). Twenty-two subjects with
idiopathic PD will be randomly assigned to either of two groups of eleven (intervention group
(IG) and control group (CG)). The experimental design will include laboratory assessments
(i.e., pre-assessment baseline at the beginning of week 1, post-assessment at the end of week
6, and retention-assessment 1 month after week 6) and in-home balance exercises. IG and CG
will perform in-home balance exercises (3 days per week for 6 consecutive weeks) with the
Smarter Balance System (SBS) recently developed by the PI or the paper-based regimen,
respectively. Both groups will also use Fitbits for 6 weeks.
Laboratory assessments: Subjects will be quantitatively assessed for static/dynamic balance
performance using a measure for the range of limits of stability (LOS) in both
anterior-posterior (A/P) and medial-lateral (M/L) directions, and a Sensory Organization Test
(SOT) consisting of six conditions (1: Normal vision and fixed support; 2: Absent vision and
fixed support; 3: Sway-referenced vision and fixed support; 4: Normal vision and
sway-referenced support; 5: Sway-referenced support and absent vision; and 6: Sway-referenced
vision and sway-referenced support) using a Balance Master® (NeuroCom International Inc.,
USA). During the SOT, center of pressure (COP) data as a function of the six SOT conditions
will be collected at a rate of 100 Hz for postural sway analysis. After the completion of
quantitative balance assessments, balance performance will be qualitatively assessed using
the Activities-specific Balance Confidence (ABC) scale and the Falls Efficacy Scale (FES). A
modified Community Health Activities Model Program for Seniors (CHAMPS) will be used to
collect the levels of exercise and non-exercise physical activity. After completion of the
pre-assessment, a member of the research team will train subjects to use the SBS's smartphone
and the Fitbit. Only the IG will be additionally trained in the use of the custom belt and
the walker and multimodal biofeedback for in-home dynamic WSBE guided by the SBS. For CG
subjects, the physical therapist (Co-I) will review the paper-based regimen for in-home
dynamic WSBE. After completion of the post-assessment, only the IG will complete a usability
and acceptability questionnaire (UAQ) for the SBS.
In-home balance exercises: Both groups will use the SBSs and Fitbits for 6 consecutive weeks.
Only the IG will complete in-home dynamic weight-shifting balance exercises (i.e., physical
therapists' recommended dynamic balance exercises, hereafter dynamic WSBE) with the SBS (3
days per week). The CG will perform dynamic WSBE following the paper-based regimen (3 days
per week) in accordance with the Health Professionals' Guide to the Physical Management of
Parkinson's disease, including detailed descriptions regarding stance condition, movements in
both A/P and M/L directions, and repetitions. Only the CG will use the SBS's smartphones and
the Fitbits (the SBS's custom belt will not be provided to the IG). To assure a safe exercise
environment, both groups will perform in-home dynamic WSBE by standing inside a walker (no
wheels). For the IG, the instructional video provided by the SBS will show how to perform
dynamic WSBE in both A/P and M/L directions by standing inside the walker without touching or
holding onto it unless the subject experiences loss of balance. For the CG, paper-based
instructions will be provided. Both groups will be instructed to continue taking prescribed
PD medication. After each trial, the IG smartphone app will store exercise-related data. The
IG and CG smartphones will store physical activity data (daily number of taken steps and
associated distance) collected from the Fitbit.
Performance metrics: Measured data from the Balance Master®, the SBSs, and the Fitbits will
be analyzed using MATLAB (The MathWorks, USA). As a function of the
pre/post/retention-assessments, two primary outcome measures (range of LOS and SOT score)
will be used to evaluate static/dynamic balance performance. Ranges of LOS in degrees
correspond to the furthest deviations of the body tilt in both A/P and M/L directions. The
SOT score that can be directly obtained from the Balance Master® ranges from 0 to 100, where
100 indicates no postural sway and 0 indicates a fall. The four supplementary outcome
measures, which are standard metrics for assessing balance performance, are a root mean
square of postural sway (RMS sway) in both A/P and M/L directions, elliptical area of
postural sway (sway area), and approximate entropy of postural sway (sway ApEn). Both RMS
sway and sway area are linear measures of balance performance, and the sway ApEn is a
non-linear measure quantifying the complexity and regularity of postural stability. For the
IG, the UAQ score (Likert scale) will be used to assess the usability and acceptability of
the SBS, and the IG's compliance with the in-home balance training regimens, total exercise
time, and number of completed exercises will be quantitatively analyzed. For both groups,
daily number of taken steps and associated distance obtained from Fitbits and ABC scale, FES,
and CHAMPS score will be analyzed.
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