3,390 research outputs found

    Vastly Different Exercise Programs Similarly Improve Parkinsonian Symptoms:A Randomized Clinical Trial

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    Objectives: To directly compare the effects of agility exergaming (EXE) and stationary cycling (CYC) exercise training on Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients’ mobility and clinical symptoms. Design: Randomized clinical trial. Setting: Outpatient physiotherapy clinic in a hospital. Participants: Seventy-four stage 2–3, nondemented PD patients were included in this study. Intervention: The groups were as follows: EXE (n = 25), CYC (n = 25), and a wait-listed control group (CON; n = 24). The EXE and CYC groups exercised 5×/week for 5 weeks, matched at 80% of the age-predicted maximal heart rate. Main Outcomes: The primary outcome was the Movement Disorders Society Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS-II) score. Secondary outcomes were Parkinson’s Disease Quastionnaire-39 (PDQ-39), the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), the Schwab and England Activities of Daily Living (SE-ADL) scale, Euro-Quality of Life-5 Dimensions (EQ-5D) questionnaire, the Berg Balance Scale (BBS), the Balance Evaluation Systems Test (BESTest), the Tinetti Assessment Tool (TAT), the Dynamic Gait Index, the 6-min walk test (6MWT), and standing posturography. Results: After treatment, UPDRS-II scores improved (mean change: EXE, –4.5 points; CYC, –3.2 points). The results for the other outcomes (EXE and CYC, respectively) were: PDQ, 13 and 17%; BDI, –2.5 and –2.1 points; 6MWT, 129.6 and 141.6 m; and EQ-5D, 12 and 9% (all p 0.05). Conclusion: Two highly different exercise programs resulted in similar improvement of most motor and clinical symptoms in PD patients

    Old adults preserve motor flexibility during rapid reaching

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    Purpose Our ability to flexibly coordinate the available degrees of freedom allows us to perform activities of daily living under various task constraints. Healthy old adults exhibit subclinical peripheral and central nervous system dysfunctions, possibly compromising the flexibility in inter-joint coordination during voluntary movements and the ability to adapt to varying task constraints. Method We examined how healthy old (75.4 +/- 5.2 years, n = 14) compared with young adults (24.3 +/- 2 years, n = 15) make use of the available motor flexibility to adapt to physical and dexterity constraints during a rapid goal-directed reaching task. We manipulated physical and dexterity demands by changing, respectively, external resistance and target size. Motor flexibility was quantified by an uncontrolled manifold (UCM) analysis. Results We found that healthy young and old adults employ similar motor flexibility as quantified by the ratio between goal equivalent and non-goal equivalent variability (V-Ratio) and were similarly able to adapt to increases in physical and dexterity demands during goal-directed rapid reaching (V-Ratio: p = .092; young: 0.548 +/- 0.113; old: 0.264 +/- 0.117). Age affected end-effector kinematics. Motor flexibility and end-effector kinematics did not correlate. Conclusions The data challenge the prevailing view that old age affects movement capabilities in general and provide specific evidence that healthy old adults preserve motor flexibility during a reaching task. Future studies applying UCM analysis should examine if experimental set-ups limit movement exploration, leaving possible age differences undetected

    Gabriel N. Hortobagyi, MD, Oral History Interview, January 23, 2013

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    Major Topics Covered: The World Summit Against Cancer The Breast Cancer Research Group Breast cancer treatments and service: evolution at MD Andersonhttps://openworks.mdanderson.org/mchv_interviewsessions/1215/thumbnail.jp

    Training History-Dependent Functional Role of EMG Model-Predicted Antagonist Moments in Knee Extensor Moment Generation in Healthy Young Adults

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    Resistance training (RT) improves the skeletal muscle’s ability to generate maximal voluntary force and is accompanied by changes in the activation of the antagonist muscle which is not targeted primarily by RT. However, the nature and role of neural adaptation to RT in the antagonist muscle is paradoxical and not well understood. We compared moments, agonist muscle activation, antagonist activation, agonist-antagonist coactivation, and electromyographic (EMG) model-predicted moments generated by antagonist hamstring muscle coactivation during isokinetic knee extension in leg strength-trained (n = 10) and untrained (n = 11) healthy, younger adults. Trained vs. untrained adults were up to 58% stronger. During knee extension, hamstring activation was 1.6-fold greater in trained vs. untrained adults (p = 0.022). This hamstring activation produced 2.6-fold greater model-predicted antagonist moments during knee extension in the trained (42.7 ± 19.55 Nm) vs. untrained group (16.4 ± 12.18 Nm; p = 0.004), which counteracted (reduced) quadriceps knee extensor moments ~43 Nm (0.54 Nm·kg−1) and by ~16 Nm (0.25 Nm·kg−1) in trained vs. untrained. Antagonist hamstring coactivation correlated with decreases and increases, respectively, in quadriceps moments in trained and untrained. The EMG model-predicted antagonist moments revealed training history-dependent functional roles in knee extensor moment generation

    OncoLog, Volume 52, Number 09, September 2007

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    Sparing Life and Limb Can a Common Spice Be Use to Treat Cancer? House Call: Your First Colonoscopy: Here\u27s What You Can Expect DiaLog: Targeted Therapies Are Here to Stay, by Gabriel N. Hortobagyi, MDhttps://openworks.mdanderson.org/oncolog/1165/thumbnail.jp

    Gabriel N. Hortobagyi, MD, Oral History Interview, March 15, 2013

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    Major Topics Covered: Overview of breast medical oncology: as a field; history of at MD Anderson Service to organizations and projects in the United States and abroad Views on MD Anderson presidentshttps://openworks.mdanderson.org/mchv_interviewsessions/1217/thumbnail.jp
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