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Effectiveness of High-Intensity Therapy in Rehabilitation of Parkinson’s Disease Patients

Szilvia Kóra, György Wersényi, Péter Prukner, István Drotár, Nándor Prontvai, Petra Kós, József Tollár

Year
2025
Citations
1
Access
Open access

Abstract

Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a progressive movement disorder with no cure. In this randomized controlled study, 100 patients with PD were assigned to four intervention groups (Exergame, Cycling, Agility, and Robot) for 14 weeks. This study evaluates the effectiveness of high-intensity therapy in a randomized clinical trial. Exergaming, cycling, agility, and robot therapies improved motor function, postural stability, and cardiovascular health. Heart rate monitoring and Borg Scale ratings confirmed the safety and adaptability of high-intensity training, with patients sustaining moderate-to-high exertion without adverse effects. Significant improvements were observed in gait speed (+0.30–0.50 m/s), Functional Independence Measure (FIM) (+25–30 points), and Berg Balance Scale scores. Integrating high-intensity, functional movement-based therapies into PD rehabilitation may offer superior motor, gait, and cardiovascular benefits compared to conventional methods.

Keywords

MedicineRehabilitationPhysical medicine and rehabilitationParkinson's diseasePhysical therapyDiseaseInternal medicine

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