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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT04897256
NA

Mobility in Daily Life and Falls in Parkinson's Disease: Potential for Rehabilitation

Sponsor: Oregon Health and Science University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The goal of this intervention is to explore the effectiveness of a Turning Intervention (TURN-IT) to improve quality of turning in participants with Parkinson's Disease (PD). An unique exercise program has been developed - TURN-IT - in which participants practice exercises that focus on physiological constraints that impair turning ability, such as axial rigidity, narrow base of support, bradykinesia, and inflexible set-shifting. The 60 participants with PD and a history of falls in the previous 12 months, will be randomized into a 6-week, 3x/week, one-on-one TURN-IT group or No-Intervention Control group. This pilot intervention study will determine the number of subjects needed for a future clinical trial and will determine the sensitivity to change with rehabilitation our daily-life turning quality measures (such as, mean and variability of number of steps to turn, turn amplitude, turn velocity). The investigators predict that the TURN-IT program will improve turning in daily life enough to justify a larger clinical trial.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

55 Years - 85 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

55

Start Date

2021-09-13

Completion Date

2026-06-01

Last Updated

2025-11-17

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

TURN-IT exercise program

Based on the exercise motor learning principles, participants spend 10-15 minutes at each Exercise Station that focuses on particular constraints of turning ability. The stations will focus on important underlying aspects of turning, such as weight-shifting and increasing axial rotation during functional turning tasks. Each station will be progressed across levels to make more challenging (such as adding a dual task). Initially participants will be supported in an overhead body-weight support system (ZeroG) to allow them to practice challenging exercises without the risk of falling.

Locations (1)

Oregon Health & Science University

Portland, Oregon, United States