Abstract

Introduction. Reduced walking endurance and balance is common among patients with PD. Treadmill training and rTMS have been shown to be effective in improving walking performance in patients with PD, but effects were modest and short-lived. Long-term effect of combined rTMS and treadmill training on walking endurance and balance performance in patients with PD is not known. Methods. 34 participants with PD were randomised into 2 groups. Participants received 12 sessions of either 25 Hz rTMS and treadmill training (25 Hz-TT) or sham rTMS and treadmill training (1 Hz-TT) conducted over 3 weeks. For 25 Hz-TT group, 600 TMS stimuli at 80% resting motor threshold were delivered to leg area of motor cortex of each hemisphere. Two- minute walk test (2MWT) and mini-Balance Evaluation System Test (mini-BEST) were used to evaluate the efficacy of interventions on walking tolerance and balance performance. Participants were tested before, after, 1 month and 3 months after intervention ended. Two- way repeated measure ANOVA was used to evaluate the outcome data. SPSS 23.0 was used for all statistical analysis. Results. Significant interaction effect was found in mini-BEST (F (3,32) = 3.247, p = 0.041). Post-hoc analysis shows that only 25-Hz group improved mini-BEST at Post (p = 0.001), 1-month (p = 0.006) and 3-month post intervention (p = 0.036). Between-group analysis of change from baseline showed that 25 Hz-TT had a greater change than sham-TT (by 1.96, p = 0.01) in improving mini-BEST. Both 25 Hz-TT and sham-TT groups improved 2MWT at all measurement time points (p < 0.001). Conclusion. Our results showed that combining 25-Hz rTMS with treadmill training improved walking endurance and balance performance in people with PD in both short-and long-term.

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