Danse-thérapie et Parkinson

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Tango for treatment of motor and non-motor manifestations in Parkinson's disease: a randomized control study.

Identifieur interne : 000004 ( PubMed/Corpus ); précédent : 000003; suivant : 000005

Tango for treatment of motor and non-motor manifestations in Parkinson's disease: a randomized control study.

Auteurs : Silvia Rios Romenets ; Julius Anang ; Seyed-Mohammad Fereshtehnejad ; Amelie Pelletier ; Ronald Postuma

Source :

RBID : pubmed:25847555

English descriptors

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

To determine effects of Argentine tango on motor and non-motor manifestations of Parkinson's disease.

DESIGN

Randomized control trial.

PARTICIPANTS

Forty patients with idiopathic Parkinson's disease.

SETTING

Movement disorder clinic and dance studio.

INTERVENTION

Two randomized groups: group (N=18) with 24 partnered tango classes, and control self-directed exercise group (N=15).

MAIN OUTCOMES MEASURES

The primary outcome was overall motor severity. Secondary outcomes included other motor measures, balance, cognition, fatigue, apathy, depression and quality of life.

RESULTS

On the primary intention-to-treat analysis there was no difference in motor severity between groups MDS-UPDRS-3 (1.6 vs.1.2-point reduction, p=0.85). Patient-rated clinical global impression of change did not differ (p=0.33), however examiner rating improved in favor of tango (p=0.02). Mini-BESTest improved in the tango group compared to controls (0.7±2.2 vs. -2.7±5.9, p=0.032). Among individual items, tango improved in both simple TUG time (-1.3±1.6s vs. 0.1±2.3, p=0.042) and TUG Dual Task score (0.4±0.9 vs. -0.2±0.4, p=0.012), with borderline improvement in walk with pivot turns (0.2±0.5 vs. -0.1±0.5, p=0.066). MoCa (0.4±1.6 vs. -0.6±1.5, p=0.080) and FSS (-3.6±10.5 vs. 2.5±6.2, p=0.057) showed a non-significant trend toward improvement in the tango group. Tango participants found the activity more enjoyable (p<0.001) and felt more "overall" treatment satisfaction (p<0.001). We found no significant differences in other outcomes or adverse events.

CONCLUSION

Argentine tango can improve balance, and functional mobility, and may have modest benefits upon cognition and fatigue in Parkinson's disease. These findings must be confirmed in longer-term trials explicitly powered for cognition and fatigue.


DOI: 10.1016/j.ctim.2015.01.015
PubMed: 25847555

Links to Exploration step

pubmed:25847555

Le document en format XML

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<name sortKey="Fereshtehnejad, Seyed Mohammad" sort="Fereshtehnejad, Seyed Mohammad" uniqKey="Fereshtehnejad S" first="Seyed-Mohammad" last="Fereshtehnejad">Seyed-Mohammad Fereshtehnejad</name>
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<term>Motor Skills (MeSH)</term>
<term>Parkinson Disease (physiopathology)</term>
<term>Parkinson Disease (therapy)</term>
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<b>OBJECTIVE</b>
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<p>To determine effects of Argentine tango on motor and non-motor manifestations of Parkinson's disease.</p>
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<b>DESIGN</b>
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<p>Randomized control trial.</p>
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<b>PARTICIPANTS</b>
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<b>SETTING</b>
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<b>INTERVENTION</b>
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<p>Two randomized groups: group (N=18) with 24 partnered tango classes, and control self-directed exercise group (N=15).</p>
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<div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">
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<b>MAIN OUTCOMES MEASURES</b>
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<p>The primary outcome was overall motor severity. Secondary outcomes included other motor measures, balance, cognition, fatigue, apathy, depression and quality of life.</p>
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<b>RESULTS</b>
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<p>On the primary intention-to-treat analysis there was no difference in motor severity between groups MDS-UPDRS-3 (1.6 vs.1.2-point reduction, p=0.85). Patient-rated clinical global impression of change did not differ (p=0.33), however examiner rating improved in favor of tango (p=0.02). Mini-BESTest improved in the tango group compared to controls (0.7±2.2 vs. -2.7±5.9, p=0.032). Among individual items, tango improved in both simple TUG time (-1.3±1.6s vs. 0.1±2.3, p=0.042) and TUG Dual Task score (0.4±0.9 vs. -0.2±0.4, p=0.012), with borderline improvement in walk with pivot turns (0.2±0.5 vs. -0.1±0.5, p=0.066). MoCa (0.4±1.6 vs. -0.6±1.5, p=0.080) and FSS (-3.6±10.5 vs. 2.5±6.2, p=0.057) showed a non-significant trend toward improvement in the tango group. Tango participants found the activity more enjoyable (p<0.001) and felt more "overall" treatment satisfaction (p<0.001). We found no significant differences in other outcomes or adverse events.</p>
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<b>CONCLUSION</b>
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<p>Argentine tango can improve balance, and functional mobility, and may have modest benefits upon cognition and fatigue in Parkinson's disease. These findings must be confirmed in longer-term trials explicitly powered for cognition and fatigue.</p>
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