Weight Training May Help Parkinson's Patients Retain Function
The weight training regimen seemed to help more than workouts focused on balance, stretching, study found.
By Robert Preidt,
HealthDay News
When it comes to helping Parkinson's
disease patients retain
vital motor function, weight training may be more effective than stretching or
balance exercises, a new study concludes.
The
findings "reconfirm our notions that exercise plays an important part in
the treatment of Parkinson's disease," according to one outside expert,
Dr. Nora Chan, director of the Movement Disorder Program at Winthrop-University
Hospital, in Mineola, N.Y.
The
research involved 48 people with Parkinson's who were randomly assigned to
either a weight-training
program or a
workout routine that included flexibility, balance and strengthening routines.
Both groups exercised for one hour, twice a week for two years.
The
severity of the patients' motor symptoms, including tremors, was
assessed after six, 12, 18, and 24 months of exercise. The symptoms were
checked when the patients were not taking their medication.
Both
groups showed improvements in motor symptoms at six months. But patients in the
weight-training group had a 7.3 point improvement in their Unified Parkinson's
Disease Rating Scale after two years, while the patients in the other group
returned to the same scores they had at the start of the study.
The
findings are being released early but will be presented at the American Academy
of Neurology's annual meeting in New Orleans in April.
"While
we have known that many different
types of exercise can
benefit Parkinson's patients over short time periods, we did not know whether
exercise improves the motor symptoms of Parkinson's over the long term,"
study author Daniel Corcos, at the University of Illinois at Chicago, said in
an AAN news release.
"Our
results suggest that long-term weight training could be considered by patients
and doctors as an important component in managing Parkinson's disease," he
added.
Another
expert, Dr. Andrew Feigin, said the study is one of many that seems to support
the notion "that regular strenuous exercise may have long-term benefits
for Parkinson's disease patients." However, participants knew which type
of exercise they were being assigned, so that might have influenced their mood
or motivation, according to Feigin, a neurologist specializing in Parkinson's
disease at the Feinstein Institute for Medical Research in Manhasset, N.Y.
For her
part, Chan added that "further studies are needed to clarify whether
certain exercises are more suitable for patients with different symptoms, in
different stages of disease, how cost effective these various programs are, and
the exact mechanisms by which exercise improves Parkinson's disease symptoms."
Findings
presented at medical meetings are considered preliminary until publication in a
peer-reviewed journal.
Get Up Get Moving Get Well and remember,
"CHIT CHAT WON'T BURN FAT"
JAY
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