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Randomized Controlled Trial
. 2021 Nov;36(11):2569-2582.
doi: 10.1002/mds.28717. Epub 2021 Jul 19.

Action Observation and Motor Imagery Improve Dual Task in Parkinson's Disease: A Clinical/fMRI Study

Affiliations
Randomized Controlled Trial

Action Observation and Motor Imagery Improve Dual Task in Parkinson's Disease: A Clinical/fMRI Study

Elisabetta Sarasso et al. Mov Disord. 2021 Nov.

Abstract

Background: Action observation training and motor imagery may improve motor learning in Parkinson's disease (PD).

Objectives: The objectives of this study were to assess mobility and balance (performing motor and dual tasks) and brain functional reorganization following 6 weeks of action observation training and motor imagery associated with dual-task gait/balance exercises in PD patients with postural instability and gait disorders relative to dual-task training alone.

Methods: Twenty-five PD-postural instability and gait disorder patients were randomized into 2 groups: the DUAL-TASK+AOT-MI group performed a 6-week gait/balance training consisting of action observation training-motor imagery combined with practicing the observed-imagined exercises; the DUAL-TASK group performed the same exercises combined with watching landscape videos. Exercises were increasingly difficult to include the dual task. At baseline and at 6 weeks, patients underwent: mobility, gait, and balance evaluations (also repeated 2 months after training), cognitive assessment, and functional MRI, including motor and dual tasks.

Results: Dual-task gait/balance training enhanced mobility, during both single- and dual-task conditions, and executive functions in PD-postural instability and gait disorders, with a long-lasting effect at 14 weeks. When exercises were preceded by action observation training-motor imagery, PD-postural instability and gait disorders showed greater improvement of balance and gait velocity both with and without the dual task, particularly during the turning phase. After training, the DUAL-TASK+AOT-MI group showed reduced recruitment of frontal areas and increased activity of cerebellum during functional-MRI motor and dual task, correlating with balance/turning velocity and executive improvements, respectively. The DUAL-TASK group showed reduced activity of supplementary motor area and increased recruitment of temporo-parietal areas during the dual task and decreased cerebellar activity during the motor task correlating with faster turning velocity. Functional MRI results were not corrected for multiple comparisons and should be interpreted carefully.

Conclusions: Adding action observation training-motor imagery to dual-task gait/balance training promotes specific functional reorganization of brain areas involved in motor control and executive-attentive abilities and more long-lasting effects on dual-task mobility and balance in PD-postural instability and gait disorders. © 2021 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.

Keywords: Parkinson's disease; action observation; dual task; fMRI; motor imagery.

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References

    1. Poewe W, Seppi K, Tanner CM, et al. Parkinson disease. Nat Rev Dis Primers 2017;3:17013.
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    1. de Souza Fortaleza AC, Mancini M, Carlson-Kuhta P, et al. Dual task interference on postural sway, postural transitions and gait in people with Parkinson's disease and freezing of gait. Gait Posture 2017;56:76-81.
    1. Piramide N, Agosta F, Sarasso E, Canu E, Volonte MA, Filippi M. Brain activity during lower limb movements in Parkinson's disease patients with and without freezing of gait. J Neurol 2020;267(4):1116-1126.

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