Quality of Life Clinical Trial
Official title:
Hippotherapy on Functional Capacity and Quality of Life in Parkinson's Disease: a Prospective Study
BACKGROUND: Motor symptoms associated with Parkinson's disease may impair one's independence
and ability to perform daily activities consequently decreases quality of life. Hippotherapy
has been shown as an effective treatment to improve function in daily activities and quality
of life in other neurological populations, thus a study was conducted to assess the effects
of hippotherapy in people with Parkinson's disease.
METHODS: Nine volunteers formed the treatment group which participated in a ten-week
hippotherapy program, and nine individuals formed the control group (attended a ten-week
series of lessons on Parkinson's disease). Outcome measures included 30-second chair stand
(as a measure of strength-endurance), gait velocity (during 10m walk test) and
health-related quality of life.
Parkinson's disease (PD) is associated with motor symptoms such as bradykinesia, rigidity
and postural instability 1 which interfere with the patient's independence, and ability to
carry out activities of daily life 2. In addition, losses in functional may result in a
decreased health-related quality of life (HRQL) 3. Thus, as PD progresses HRQL gets worse 4.
Exercise programs are suggested to improve functional capacity and HRQL in people with PD 3.
However, in the later stages of PD, mobility problems restrict the potential to participate
in exercise programs, resulting in even greater loss in functional capacity and HRQL.
Furthermore, a decline in the efficacy of pharmacological treatment and complications due to
motor fluctuations and medication side effects make the role of complementary treatments
such as hippotherapy critical to individuals with PD at late stages. Hippotherapy is a
therapeutic intervention commonly used in populations with mobility deficits, since they do
not require effort or walking from patients who can no exercise in standing position. When
is on the horse, the patient exercises as he/she is walking unassisted 5. Neurological
conditions are improved by horse's movement stimulations. The set formed by the patient and
his horse performs rhythmic and three-dimensional oscillations which trigger very important
neuromuscular responses from the rider's postural reflex mechanisms 6. The horse's movements
are sensed by the participant on the saddle, and when the horse is slowly walking it has
been argued to be similar to the pelvic movement produced by human gait, thereby
strengthening the trunk muscles and improving balance 7. The senses are integrated during
the act of riding performing sensory stimulation 8. Furthermore, hippotherapy has been
demonstrated to be an effective method to improve functional capacity by increasing gait
velocity in people with brain disorders 9, functional mobility in elderly 10 and functional
strength in people after stroke 11 and in people with spinal cord injury 5. In addition,
hippotherapy has been shown to improve HRQL in children and in adults 6.
Considering the potential benefits of hippotherapy to anticipatory postural adjustments and
sensory stimulation 9, 11, it could be hypothesized that hippotherapy may increase
functional capacity and improve HRQL in individuals with PD. This hypothesis has not been
tested yet. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to assess the effects of a hippotherapy
program on functional capacity and on HRQL in people with PD.
(4) Methods
Subjects People with confirmed diagnosis of PD by medical report were invited through
advertisements on radio, on television, public announcements and posters around the
hospitals to participate in the Physical Activities Program for Persons with
Neurodegenerative Diseases. Among 81 registered volunteers, 18 participants, six women and
twelve men, unable to perform usual physical activity because they were in the late stages
according to Hoehn and Yahr scale (H & Y≥ 3), or because they need to use a wheelchair for
severe mobility problems were enrolled in the hippotherapy program which formed the sample
(n=18). Exclusion criteria were uncontrolled hypertension, unstable cardiovascular disease
and had practiced riding or hippotherapy six months before the intervention period. Among
the 18 volunteers from the sample, three women and six men were randomized for the
intervention group called hippotherapy group (HT) (n=9), which performed ten weeks of
hippotherapy sessions (2 familiarization + 8 hippotherapy weeks) twice a week with each
session lasting thirty minutes. Nine other participants who were waiting to be allocated to
the hippotherapy program in the following semester attended lectures on PD, twice a week for
ten weeks, with each session lasting thirty minutes. Demographics and characteristics of the
sample can be seen in Table 1. This study was approved by the Research Ethics Committee of
the University of Brasilia on 10/10/2013 by the number CAAE 17329213.7.0000.0030. All
participants were informed about the procedures and agreed to participate in the study
signing the informed consent term.
Instruments Quality of life was measured using the Parkinson's Disease Quality of Life
Questionnaire (PDQL) Brazilian version 4.
Functional mobility was evaluated by the Timed Up and Go Test (TUG) according Podsiadlo and
Richardson 12.
Strength endurance was measured using the Thirty-second Chair Stand Test (30CST) according
Gill and McBurney 13.
Gait velocity was evaluated using the Ten Meter Walk Test (TMW) according Bohannon, Andrews
and Thomas 14.
All functional tests had three trials with a 2 minutes interval between each trial, and the
average of the two last measurements was used for analysis.
Hippotherapy Procedures Familiarization sessions were initially 15 minutes and gradually
evolved to 30 minutes in order to allow all participants to adapt to the horse's rhythmic
movements and to the act of mounting the horse. The sessions were performed at the First
Regiment of Cavalry Guard of the Brazilian Army. All practitioners used helmet, shirt, pants
and closed shoes. The team was composed by an auxiliary guide, a physical education teacher
and two auxiliaries. In order to mount and dismount, all participants used a specific ramp
for hippotherapy classes. All horses used saddle and riding equipment, the stirrups were
individually adjusted.
The sessions began with a 5 minutes warm up that involved stretching and body awareness
exercises. Then, the training was conducted for 20 minutes with arms and torso exercises,
changes of direction called serpentine movements; up and down hip movements with feet on
stirrups, and forced expiration. In the final 5 minutes, exercises for relaxation were
conducted with the horse which involved moving the hand on the horse's neck, laying forward
on the head and stroking the horse. The horses walking speed was between 5.8 and 6.4 Km/h.
In order to assess the effect of the hippotherapy the difference between post and pre-tests
scores for each dependent measure was calculated (delta (∆)).
To assess whether data had normal distribution the Shapiro-Wilk test was used, which did not
indicate a normal distribution for functional capacity variables. Thus, the Mann-Whitney U
test for independent samples was used in order to compare the changes in functional capacity
between groups. The Shapiro-Wilk test demonstrated a normal distribution for PDQL variables
data, and then parametric statistics was performed with a one-way analysis of variance
(ANOVA). Statistical analysis was performed using the program Statistica 7.0 (StatSoft Inc.,
Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA), adopting a significance level of p≤0.05.
;
Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Prospective
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Active, not recruiting |
NCT05559255 -
Changes in Pain, Spasticity, and Quality of Life After Use of Counterstrain Treatment in Individuals With SCI
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT06238557 -
Prospective Evaluation of Psychological Consequences and Impact on Long-term Quality of Life
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT05563805 -
Exploring Virtual Reality Adventure Training Exergaming
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT05472935 -
Asynchronous Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction to Reduce Burnout in Licensed Clinical Social Workers
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT04444544 -
Quality of Life and High-Risk Abdominal Cancer Surgery
|
||
Completed |
NCT04281953 -
Impact on Quality of Life of Long-term Ototoxicity in Cancer Survivors
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT05546931 -
Mobile Health Program for Rural Hypertension
|
N/A | |
Active, not recruiting |
NCT04746664 -
Effects of Nutrition Counselling on Old Age People's Nutritional Status and Quality of Life in Bahir Dar City, North West Ethiopia
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT05387174 -
Nursing Intervention in Two Risk Factors of the Metabolic Syndrome and Quality of Life in the Climacteric Period
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT04142827 -
The Effect of Long Term Therapy With High Flow Humidification Compared to Usual Care in Patients With Bronchiectasis (BX)
|
N/A | |
Active, not recruiting |
NCT05903638 -
A Pilot RCT: the Impact of a Virtual MBSR Course on Women With Primary Infertility
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT05538455 -
Investigating ProCare4Life Impact on Quality of Life of Elderly Subjects With Neurodegenerative Diseases
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT06216015 -
Exercise Training and Kidney Transplantation
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT03813420 -
Sleep Quality of Physiotherapy Students Quality of Life and Physical Activity Level
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05550545 -
Infant RSV Infections and Health-related Quality of Life of Families
|
||
Completed |
NCT05346588 -
THRIVE Feasibility Trial
|
Phase 3 | |
Recruiting |
NCT05233020 -
Robotic Versus Hybrid Assisted Ventral Hernia Repair
|
N/A | |
Terminated |
NCT03304184 -
The Role of Biodentine in Class V Dental Lesions on Oral Health Related Quality of Life
|
Phase 3 | |
Completed |
NCT05063305 -
Probiotics, Immunity, Stress, and QofL
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05380856 -
Sacral Neuromodulation for Neurogenic Lower Urinary Tract, Bowel and Sexual Dysfunction
|
N/A |