Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Unknown

UnknownNCT05514379

Effect of Cognitive Training on Gait in Parkinson's Disease

Disorders of Gait, Postural Stability and Cognition in Parkinson's Disease: Presymptomatic Detection and Targeted Rehabilitation

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
50 (estimated)
Sponsor
General University Hospital, Prague · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
50 Years – 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Physiotherapy and targeted rehabilitation are routinely performed in order to influence disorders of posture, gait and stability in Parkinson´s disease (PD), but their effects have been controversial (Keus et al. 2014; Walton wt al. 2014). Recently, several studies suggested that cognitive training can improve gait in patients with PD (Peterson et al. 2016, Heremans et al. 2013), similar to the effects seen in the elderly (Yogev-Seligmann et al. 2008; Amboni et al. 2013). Specific training programs including dual tasking with automatic verbal series, counting etc. have led to increased walking speed and improved stepping cadence, length, and duration in patients with dementia (Schwenk et al. 2010). However, since in advanced PD patients dual-task gait training has to be supervised by therapists, it is not a suitable type of therapy to be performed at home. Therefore, this study aims to verify and extend the encouraging results of the single study which showed a positive effect of cognitive function training on gait in PD (Milman et al. 2014) by exploring this effect in advanced PD patients, by assessing the effect on gait using more targeted clinical and instrumental evaluation, and by comparing two modes of therapy delivery, group and computer-based.

Detailed description

* Background: In a pilot study, Milman et al. 2014 showed that computer-based cognitive training focusing on executive function and attention performed at home might improve selected gait parameters in early patients with Parkinson´s disease (PD). * Goal 1: To explore this effect in advanced PD patients * Hypothesis 1: Effect of cognitive training focusing on executive function and attention will be detected also in advanced PD patients and this effect will be larger as compared to the results published by Milman et al. 2014. * Goal 2: To verify the results published by Milman et al. 2014 using more targeted clinical and instrumental gait assessment, including dual-task gait evaluation as well as instrumental testing of turn fluency (Bertoli et al. 2019). * Hypothesis 2: The results published by Milman et al. 2014 will be confirmed and an effect on dual-task gait and turn fluency will be shown. * Goal 3: To explore the role of the form of therapy setting, i.e. whether group setting might increase the effect of cognitive training on gait as compared to individual cognitive training at home. Such results have been shown in the case of a physiotherapy intervention by King et al. 2015. * Hypothesis 3: The effect of group cognitive training on gait will be larger as compared to individual dose-matched, computer-based cognitive training performed at home. However, it remains to be determined whether the effect size difference between the two groups will outweigh the advantages of tele-rehabilitation. * Design: Randomised-controlled trial * Interventions: experimental group: group cognitive training focusing on executive function and attention; control group: computer-based cognitive training focusing on executive function and attention performed at home. Intervention in both groups will be dose-matched (experimental: 60 mins, 2x/week, 12 weeks; control: 30 mins, 4x/week, 12 weeks) * Follow-up: at 1 and 3 months time points. * Power analysis results: at least 38 patients.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALcognitive trainingCognitive training focused on executive function, attention and working memory delivered either by the therapist in a group setting (experimental group) or by a specialized software for cognitive training (Rehacom) at home.

Timeline

Start date
2022-10-01
Primary completion
2023-10-01
Completion
2023-12-01
First posted
2022-08-24
Last updated
2023-09-14

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Czechia

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05514379. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.