Physiological complexity of gait between regular and non-exercisers with Parkinson's disease

Physiological complexity represents overall health of a system and its underlying capacity to adapt to stresses. The primary purpose of this study was to determine if physiological complexity of gait both ON and OFF anti-Parkinson medication differed between regular and non-exercisers with Parkinson...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical biomechanics (Bristol) 2019-08, Vol.68, p.23-28
Hauptverfasser: Combs-Miller, Stephanie A., Dugan, Eric L., Beachy, Ann, Derby, Brook B., Hosinski, Alicia L., Robbins, Kristen
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Physiological complexity represents overall health of a system and its underlying capacity to adapt to stresses. The primary purpose of this study was to determine if physiological complexity of gait both ON and OFF anti-Parkinson medication differed between regular and non-exercisers with Parkinson's disease. Twenty participants with idiopathic Parkinson's disease were enrolled in this cross-sectional study (regular exercisers n = 10, non-exercisers n = 10). Two data collection sessions were completed during a single visit, first after a 12-hour overnight withdrawal from anti-Parkinson medications (OFF), and again one-hour after taking anti-Parkinson medications (ON). During each session participants completed a 2-minute walking task at their preferred pace while wearing wireless inertial measurement units on each lower extremity segment (thigh, shank, foot). Multivariate multiscale entropy was calculated from the tri-axial accelerometer signals and converted to a complexity index for analysis. Regular exercisers demonstrated significantly higher complexity indices ON and OFF anti-Parkinson medications compared to non-exercisers (ON F = 3.84 P = 0.02; OFF F = 3.61, P 
ISSN:0268-0033
1879-1271
DOI:10.1016/j.clinbiomech.2019.05.032