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Dance for Parkinson’s—The effects on whole body co-ordination during turning around

Dance for Parkinson’s—The effects on whole body co-ordination during turning around
Dance for Parkinson’s—The effects on whole body co-ordination during turning around
Objective
To investigate the effects of ballroom and Latin American dancing classes on turning in people with Parkinson’s.

Design
This study employed a randomised, controlled, experimental design.

Setting
Dance classes were performed in a community dance centre in Southern England and all assessments took place a gait laboratory.

Participants
Twenty-seven people with mild-moderate Parkinson’s participated.

Intervention
Participants were randomly allocated to receive either 20, 1-h dancing classes over 10 weeks (n = 15), or a ‘usual care’ control group (n = 12).

Main outcome measure
Twelve, 180° on-the-spot turns to the predicted/un-predicted and preferred/un-preferred direction were analysed for each participant, using 3-dimensional motion analysis before and after the intervention period, alongside clinical measures.

Results
Movement of the head, pelvis, and feet during turning in people with Parkinson’s are affected by dancing with tighter coupling of body segments. Significant 4-way interactions between the groups, over time and turn style, with longer latency of the head (p = 0.008) and greater rotation in the pelvis (p = 0.036), alongside a trend of slower movement of the first (p = 0.063) and second (p = 0.081) foot in controls were shown, with minimal change in dancers. All interactions were affected by the type of turn. No significant differences were found in the centre of mass displacement, turn time or clinical measures.

Conclusion
Those who danced were better able to coordinate their axial and perpendicular segments and surprisingly became more ‘en bloc’ in their turning behaviour, suggesting this may be a beneficial adaptation, rather than a maladaptive result of Parkinson’s, as previously suggested.
0965-2299
91-97
Hulbert, Sophia
eaded0e0-3abe-4972-8138-526baac5c472
Ashburn, Ann
818b9ce8-f025-429e-9532-43ee4fd5f991
Roberts, Lisa
0a937943-5246-4877-bd6b-4dcd172b5cd0
Verheyden, Geert
aabb1bd5-f394-4c82-ba97-7926a4255282
Hulbert, Sophia
eaded0e0-3abe-4972-8138-526baac5c472
Ashburn, Ann
818b9ce8-f025-429e-9532-43ee4fd5f991
Roberts, Lisa
0a937943-5246-4877-bd6b-4dcd172b5cd0
Verheyden, Geert
aabb1bd5-f394-4c82-ba97-7926a4255282

Hulbert, Sophia, Ashburn, Ann, Roberts, Lisa and Verheyden, Geert (2017) Dance for Parkinson’s—The effects on whole body co-ordination during turning around. Complementary Therapies in Medicine, 32, 91-97. (doi:10.1016/j.ctim.2017.03.012).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective
To investigate the effects of ballroom and Latin American dancing classes on turning in people with Parkinson’s.

Design
This study employed a randomised, controlled, experimental design.

Setting
Dance classes were performed in a community dance centre in Southern England and all assessments took place a gait laboratory.

Participants
Twenty-seven people with mild-moderate Parkinson’s participated.

Intervention
Participants were randomly allocated to receive either 20, 1-h dancing classes over 10 weeks (n = 15), or a ‘usual care’ control group (n = 12).

Main outcome measure
Twelve, 180° on-the-spot turns to the predicted/un-predicted and preferred/un-preferred direction were analysed for each participant, using 3-dimensional motion analysis before and after the intervention period, alongside clinical measures.

Results
Movement of the head, pelvis, and feet during turning in people with Parkinson’s are affected by dancing with tighter coupling of body segments. Significant 4-way interactions between the groups, over time and turn style, with longer latency of the head (p = 0.008) and greater rotation in the pelvis (p = 0.036), alongside a trend of slower movement of the first (p = 0.063) and second (p = 0.081) foot in controls were shown, with minimal change in dancers. All interactions were affected by the type of turn. No significant differences were found in the centre of mass displacement, turn time or clinical measures.

Conclusion
Those who danced were better able to coordinate their axial and perpendicular segments and surprisingly became more ‘en bloc’ in their turning behaviour, suggesting this may be a beneficial adaptation, rather than a maladaptive result of Parkinson’s, as previously suggested.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 22 March 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 2 April 2017
Published date: June 2017

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 415086
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/415086
ISSN: 0965-2299
PURE UUID: 8e80d98c-f01c-46d2-9efe-cfb4f5d10343
ORCID for Lisa Roberts: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2662-6696

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 25 Oct 2017 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:54

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Contributors

Author: Sophia Hulbert
Author: Ann Ashburn
Author: Lisa Roberts ORCID iD
Author: Geert Verheyden

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