Effects of Gait Rehabilitation With Motor Imagery in People With Parkinson's Disease (GAITimagery)
Parkinson Disease
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Parkinson Disease focused on measuring Gait rehabilitation, Motor imagery, Biomechanics of gait, Parkinson's disease
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Being diagnosed with PD according to the United Kingdom Parkinson's Disease Society Brain Bank diagnostic scale, ratified through a report made by the neurologist
- To present a score from I to III on the Hoehn and Yahr scale, which implies not requiring support or help from a third person to walk
- To not present alteration in their cognitive state, determined by a score higher than 25 in the Mini-Mental State Examination
- To have stable medication from the month prior to the start of the study until the complete conclusion of the study.
Exclusion Criteria:
- To present another pathology or neurological alteration different from Parkinson's disease
- To present an acute clinical presentation of musculoskeletal disease or disorder that limits mobility;
- To report pain greater than 3 points on the Visual Analogue Scale
- To suffer blindness, deafness and / or any other visual / auditory alteration or pathology that may influence the ability to understand instructions and carry them out
- To present uncontrolled chronic diseases
- To suffer balance impairments due to other diseases.
Sites / Locations
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Active Comparator
Motor imagery and gait training group
Gait training group without motor imagery
Gait training twice a week for six weeks. Each rehabilitation session is composed of an initial 5 minutes of warm-up exercises (general mobility, coordination, strength, flexibility, balance, and breathing), followed by 45 minutes of gait training with motor imagery exercises and a final 10 minutes of muscle stretching. In the central 45 minutes of the session, exercises will be developed to improve objective characteristics of the gait-related to spatiotemporal and kinematic parameters. Objective and subjective feedback will be used for each exercise. In an interspersed way, motor imagery exercises will be carried out where participants must rehearse or simulate mentally each gait exercise that will be developed in the session.
Gait training twice a week for six weeks. Each rehabilitation session is composed of an initial 5 minutes of warm-up exercises (general mobility, coordination, strength, flexibility, balance, and breathing), followed by 45 minutes of gait training with motor imagery exercises and a final 10 minutes of muscle stretching. In the central 45 minutes of the session, exercises will be developed to improve objective characteristics of the gait-related to spatiotemporal and kinematic parameters. Objective and subjective feedback will be used for each exercise. In the periods that the experimental group performs the motor imagery exercises, the control group will take breaks.