Exercise and Sleep in Parkinson's Disease
Parkinson Disease
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Parkinson Disease focused on measuring Parkinson's disease, Rehabilitation, Neurosciences, Sleep, Exercise, Cardiovascular training, Resistance training, Cognition, Motor function, Quality of life
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Persons with mild-moderate idiopathic Parkinson's Disease (Modified Hoehn & Yahr Scale stages 1-3);
- On a stable dosage of medication during the previous month;
- Having poor sleep quality defined as a score > 18 in the PDSS-2(scores above this cut-off value define clinically relevant sleep disorders);
Exclusion Criteria:
- Having atypical parkinsonism, dementia or any other neurological, psychiatric or cardiovascular comorbidity affecting the ability to perform exercise;
- Presenting severe untreated obstructive sleep apnea (OSA);
- Having a Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) score <21
- Having a Beck Depression Inventory (BDI version 2) score >4
- Having absolute contraindications to exercise and to undergo transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS);
- Currently are or will be enrolled in a drug or exercise trial during the duration of the study;
- Having participated in a structured exercise program > 2 times per week in the two months prior to the enrollment in the study
Sites / Locations
- Jewish Rehabiliation HospitalRecruiting
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Experimental
Cardiovascular training
Resistance training
Cardiovascular training (CT) will be performed on a recumbent stepper. CT will start at low intensity, and through a linear progression will reach vigorous intensity; then, this intensity will be maintained until the end of the intervention. Each session will include five minutes of warm-up and cool-down performed at the beginning and the end of the training, respectively. Furthermore, five minutes of stretching will be performed after the cool down. CT's sessions will approximately last 45 minutes and will be interspersed with at least 48 hours of recovery.
Resistance training (RT) intensity will be estimated using the percentage of one-maximal repetition (1-RM) defined as the maximal weight liftable for ten maximal repetitions with proper form. The program will include five exercises (leg press, lat machine, leg extension, leg curl, bench press) and will start at high-volume low-intensity. RT will follow a periodization to reach high-intensity low-volume at the end of the intervention (week 12). The training sessions will start with five-minute of warm-up performed on a recumbent stepper and will end with five-minute of stretching (cool-down). RT's sessions will approximately last 45 minutes and will be interspersed with at least 48 hours of recovery.