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Enhance Your Wellbeing With Exercise

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I have had to give up running but I have replaced it with walking each day. ... photos courtesy of Tom Blaschko of Idyll Arbor, Inc. APDA booklet 'Be Active! ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Enhance Your Wellbeing With Exercise


1
Enhance Your Wellbeing With Exercise
  • Laurel Beck, PT, NCS
  • November 10, 2007

2
Exercise ex- out of acere, to restrain
  • An act of putting into use.
  • Discharge of a function, duty, or office.
  • Activity requiring physical or mental exertion,
    esp. when performed to maintain or develop
    fitness.
  • Something practiced so as to increase ones skill
    lta piano exercisegt.

3
Purpose of Exercise
  • Reducing effects of Parkinsons
  • Health promotion and maintenance
  • And it makes you feel better!

4
PD Motor Symptoms
  • Tremor
  • Bradykinesia and Akinesia
  • Rigidity
  • Impaired Postural Responses
  • Decreased Automatic and Spontaneous Movement
  • Difficulty with Initiation and Cessation of
    Movement
  • Difficulty with Rapid Alternating Movements
  • Dyskinesia

5
Secondary Complications of PD
  • Balance Problems
  • Gait Deviations
  • Deconditioning Weakness
  • Soft Tissue Adaptation
  • Loss of Joint Motion
  • Reduced postural alignment
  • Loss of Function

6
Secondary Complications
  • Dysphagia
  • Drooling
  • Hypoventilation
  • Constipation
  • Urinary Problems
  • Depression
  • Social Isolation

7
Lower Your Risks with Exercise
  • Premature death
  • Colon cancer
  • Heart disease and high blood pressure
  • Diabetes
  • Falls and fractures
  • Osteoporosis
  • High cholesterol

8
Fall Risk
  • PD impacts normal postural responses
  • Risk of falls is 9 times greater in PD, than age
    matched controls
  • Absent or diminished ankle, hip, arm and stepping
    responses
  • May take several steps to recover from postural
    perturbation or rigidly fall

9
Even more reasons to Exercise!
  • Maximize posture
  • Preserve muscle strength and flexibility
  • Improve cardiovascular endurance
  • Maintain weight
  • Improve sleep
  • Reduce stress, anxiety, and depression
  • Boost energy level
  • NEUROPROTECTIVE

10
Neuroprotective
  • Early non-use is especially relevant, as recent
    research in animal models of PD has shown that
    inactivity may actually contribute to
    degeneration
  • Continuous practice and forced use of impaired
    limbs prevent and/or reverse motor impairments

11
Research Supports Exercise!
  • Exercise improves overall performance in PD
    patients
  • Exercise of moderate intensity leads to an
    increase in the level of dopamine
  • Specific measures of improvement include better
    stride length, walking speed ability, and
    activities of daily living

12
Exercise per Hoehn and Yahr Stages
  • Focus on health promotion, optimizing general
    strength, flexibility, balance, endurance and
    prevention of impairments
  • General conditioning, flexibility, and fall
    prevention/gait strategies
  • Focus on fall prevention. Also general exercise
    with emphasis on safety
  • Maximizing flexibility for ADLs and mobility

13
Its Not Giving Up. Its Replacing.By Hal Newsom
  • Giving up is part of living with this disease.
    I have had to give up running but I have replaced
    it with walking each day. I have had to give up
    swimming the crawl stroke in Lake Washington but
    I have replaced it with the backstroke and a
    floatation device around my waist that keeps my
    legs from sinking. I have had to give up hiking
    up steep trails in the woods but I have replaced
    it with shorter day hikes.

14
  • I urge my Parkinsons friends not to give up
    anything without replacing it. You cant beat
    this disease but you can surely initiate new
    activities that take into account your changing
    physical condition. My skiing days are over but
    I have a world of new opportunities ahead of me.
    I call them replacements.

15
Traditional Exercise
  • Stretching
  • Strengthening
  • Cardiovascular training

16
Complete Exercise Program
  • Deep breathing
  • Relaxation
  • Stretching
  • (Strengthening)
  • Balance
  • Coordination
  • Cardiovascular training

17
Deep Breathing Improves
  • Posture
  • Air exchange
  • Sleep
  • Mood
  • Stress management
  • Energy
  • Attention (ability to focus)

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19
Lets Practice!
  • Sit comfortably (may lie down at home)
  • Relax shoulders
  • Become aware of your breathing pattern
  • Inhale through nose
  • Slowly, effortlessly
  • Exhale through mouth
  • Fully, allow tension to leave body

20
Relaxation
  • Relaxation can restore physical and mental energy
    levels
  • Relaxation may help dystonia and dyskinesia
  • Relaxing tight muscles can ease discomfort
    (headache, sore back, fatigue)
  • Find time daily for your favorite relaxation
    techniques deep breathing, relaxation tape,
    meditation, biofeedback

21
Stretching
  • Flexibility allows for better muscular balance
    and efficiency of movement
  • Include rotation and extension
  • Start rotational movements at limbs, then trunk
    for rigidity
  • Stretching improves circulation to the muscles
    and can reduce pain
  • It is recommended to try lying flat for at least
    30 minutes daily

22
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24
Strengthening
  • Generally with light weights
  • Closed chain exercises preferred
  • Use large/full movements
  • Builds muscle mass
  • Helps bone density
  • Allows for less effort with activities

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29
Balance and Coordination
  • Specific exercises from physical therapy
  • Activities that require balance and coordination
    (tai chi)
  • Challenge yourself with change in tempo or
    activity or direction (random practice)
  • Dancing, walking, yoga, tai chi, walking, ball
    sports, aerobic classes

30
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33
Cardiovascular Training
  • Aerobic exercise increases endurance, strengthens
    the heart and lungs, tones muscles, and increases
    striatal dopamine
  • Examples are walking, jogging, bicycling,
    swimming, stair stepper, and dancing
  • Ideally at least 3-4 times a week

34
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35
General Rules
  • Cool down period!
  • Exercise and walk in a safe environment
  • Pace yourself
  • Guidelines are 3-4x/week for gt30 min.
  • Avoid pain
  • Avoid over-exhaustion
  • Goal is to achieve subsequent invigoration and
    relaxation
  • Check with MD or PT if questions

36
Variety of Exercise Options
  • Dance
  • Exercise Classes
  • Gardening
  • Golf
  • Hiking and Outdoors Activities
  • Martial Arts
  • Swimming
  • Walking
  • Yoga

37
Tai Chi
  • Integrates mind, body, and spirit
  • Traditionally used to facilitate flow of chi
  • Yang and Chen styles
  • Helps improve balance
  • Can be adapted to level of physical ability

38
Qigong
  • Exercise therapy based on the principles of
    traditional Chinese medicine
  • Combines the practice of motion and rest
  • Guided by mental imagery
  • Improvements in many areas
  • Constipation
  • Postural stability
  • Sleep
  • Energy

39
Video
40
When do I start?
  • Now!!!
  • Slow down the progression and complications from
    Parkinsons
  • Stay as active as you can (variety)
  • Stay in shape (mentally and physically)
  • Improve your quality of life

41
Definition of Wellbeing
  • n. The state of being healthy, happy, or
    prosperous.

42
Ideas for Wellness Resource List
  • If you highly recommend a wellness institution or
    provider, please write down the following
    information
  • Name of person or facility
  • Physical address (especially city)
  • Phone number
  • E-mail address

43
Thanks to All!!!
  • Volunteers for video project
  • Aquatic Therapy photos courtesy of Tom Blaschko
    of Idyll Arbor, Inc.
  • APDA booklet Be Active!
  • Douglas Kinnaird ATRIC, LMP
  • Terry King with medical photography

44
General Exercise Information
  • www.americanheart.org
  • www.justmove.org
  • www.cdc.gov
  • www.shapeup.org

45
References
  • Albanese, Alberto Can falls be prevented in
    Parkinsons disease? J Neurol Neurosurg
    Psychiatry 2007 78661
  • Crizzle AM, Newhouse IJ Is Physical Exercise
    Beneficial for Persons with Parkinsons Disease?
    Clin J Sport Med, Sept 2006 vol 16, no 5422-425
  • Boelen M The role of Rehabilitative Modalities
    and Exercise in Parkinsons Disease Dis Mon
    2007 53259-264

46
More References
  • Farley BG, Koshland GF Training BIG to move
    faster the application of the speed-amplitude
    relation as a rehabilitation strategy for people
    with Parkinsons disease Exp Brain Res (2005)
    167462-467
  • Adkin, AL, Bloem, BR, Allum JHJ Trunk sway
    measurements during stance and gait tasks in
    Parkinsons disease Gait and Posture (2005) 22
    240-249
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