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Residual effects of combined vibratory and plantar stimulation while seated influences plantar pressure and spatiotemporal gait measures in individuals with Parkinson抯 disease exhibiting freezing of gait
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Metadata
Document Title
Residual effects of combined vibratory and plantar stimulation while seated influences plantar pressure and spatiotemporal gait measures in individuals with Parkinson抯 disease exhibiting freezing of gait
Author
Phuenpathom W. Panyakaew P. Vateekul P. Surangsrirat D. Bhidayasiri R.
Affiliations
Chulalongkorn Centre of Excellence for Parkinson抯 Disease and Related Disorders Faculty of Medicine Chulalongkorn University and King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital Thai Red Cross Society Bangkok Thailand; Department of Computer Engineering Faculty of Engineering Chulalongkorn University Bangkok Thailand; Assistive Technology and Medical Devices Research Center National Science and Technology Development Agency Pathum Thani Thailand; The Academy of Science The Royal Society of Thailand Bangkok Thailand
Type
Article
Source Title
Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience
ISSN
16634365
Year
2023
Volume
15
Open Access
All Open Access Gold Green
Publisher
Frontiers Media SA
DOI
10.3389/fnagi.2023.1280324
Abstract
Introduction: Combined plantar pressure and vibratory stimulation has been shown to decrease freezing of gait (FOG) episodes and improve spatiotemporal gait parameters compared to single stimulation in Parkinson抯 disease (PD) patients with FOG. However the effect of combined plantar stimulations on plantar pressure analysis has never been explored. Methods: Forty PD patients with frequent FOG were allocated to either FOG shoes embedded with a 100 Hz vibratory stimulation at the Achilles tendons and a soft thickened silicone pad at the hallux and sole or sham shoes with a non-working vibratory motor and a flat non-pressure silicone pad (20 patients per arm) while seated for 96 s. The objective gait and plantar pressure analysis were measured immediately after the stimulation. Outcomes included the normalized percentage of changes in percent FOG (%FOG) and plantar pressure in the heel-strike and push-off phase that were compared between pre- and post-stimulations. Results: The FOG shoes group showed significantly decreased %FOG (81.5 ? 28.9% vs. 6.8 ? 22.1% p < 0.001) plantar pressure in the heel-strike (47.8 ? 43.7% vs. 4.3 ? 9.8% p < 0.001) plantar pressure in the push-off (57.7 ? 59.6% vs. 6.2 ? 11.6% p < 0.001) force time integral (FTI) (40.9 ? 32.5% vs. 6.6 ? 17.3% p < 0.001) and decreased heel contact time (19.3 ? 12.3% vs. 22.7 ? 32.5% p < 0.001) when compared to the sham group. There was a strong negative correlation between %FOG and peak plantar pressure (r = ?0.440 p = 0.005) plantar pressure in the heel-strike (r = ?0.847 p < 0.001). Conclusion: Our study demonstrated that the FOG shoe could decrease FOG episodes by improving the heel-strike pressure toe push-off and normalized heel-to-toe plantar pressure suggesting that modification inputs from the peripheral sensory systems might significant improvement in FOG in PD. Copyright ? 2024 Phuenpathom Panyakaew Vateekul Surangsrirat and Bhidayasiri.
Keyword
freezing of gait | Parkinson shoe | Parkinson抯 disease | plantar pressure | vibration
License
CC BY
Rights
Authors
Publication Source
WOS