Is virtual reality beneficial for dual-task gait training in patients with Parkinson's disease? A systematic review

Author:

Freitag Fernanda1,Brucki Sonia Maria Dozzi2ORCID,Barbosa Alessandra Ferreira3,Chen Janini1,Souza Carolina de Oliveira1,Valente Débora Francato4,Chien Hsin Fen1,Bedeschi Cynthia5,Voos Mariana Callil6

Affiliation:

1. FMUSP, Brazil; Rehabilitation in Movement Disorders (REMOVE) Research Group, Brazil

2. FMUSP, Brazil

3. Rehabilitation in Movement Disorders (REMOVE) Research Group, Brazil; FMUSP, Brazil

4. Rehabilitation in Movement Disorders (REMOVE) Research Group, Brazil

5. USP, Brazil

6. FMUSP, Brazil; Rehabilitation in Movement Disorders (REMOVE) Research Group, Brazil; FMUSP, Brazil

Abstract

ABSTRACT This systematic review examined the evidence about the effects of virtual reality (VR) on dual-task gait training in Parkinson's disease (PD). Methods: this study (PROSPERO registration CRD42019114736) aimed to answer the question: “Is VR beneficial for dual-task gait training in patients with PD?” We searched for studies from 2008 to 2018 on Medline/PubMed and Web of Science/Web of knowledge databases. The keywords were Parkinson AND gait training AND virtual reality OR Parkinson AND gait training AND game. A total of 55 articles were retrieved, of which 11 systematic reviews, 11 opinions, letters to the editor, posters or conferences abstracts and 17 studies not evaluating the effects of VR gait training were excluded. Three further studies addressing VR dual-task gait training in PD (found in references of studies selected) were also included. Therefore, 19 studies were included and analysed. Results: all studies reported gait improvement after VR training. Many clinical scales were used, hampering comparison of the effects of each protocol. Conclusion: VR dual-task gait training should be part of rehabilitation protocols for PD. The studies showed that VR training was effective, although specific guidelines have not yet been established.

Publisher

FapUNIFESP (SciELO)

Subject

Cognitive Neuroscience,Geriatrics and Gerontology,Clinical Neurology,Neurology,Sensory Systems

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