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Parkinson's Disease - Lifestyle Changes


Gait Training. Practicing new methods for standing, walking, and turning may help retain balance. The following tips may be helpful:

  • Take large steps when walking forward, raising the toes at the forward step, and hitting the ground with the heel.
  • Take small steps while turning.
  • When walking or turning, have the legs 12 to 15 inches apart to provide a wide base.
  • Do not wear rubber or crepe-soled shoes because they grip the floor and may cause the patient to fall forward.
  • Using devices that keep a rhythmic beat, such a metronome (a simple device used by musicians to keep time), may be very effective, possibly more than music itself, in helping patients to walk faster and take longer steps. One study found that setting a metronome rhythm to about 10% faster than the patient's fastest gait offers significant improvement over walking to no rhythm at all or to a rhythm that matches the gait.


Reducing Muscle Freezing. The patient should practice regular daily activities that simplify actions and reduce the incidence of muscle freezing. Most often, freezing occurs when a patient begins to move or is presented with an obstacle. Walkers do not appear to be helpful for freezing. The following may be helpful.

  • Rock from side to side.
  • If the legs feel frozen, lift the toes. This simple action may free spasm in some cases.
  • Hum marching tunes. In fact, music has been shown to help people move and to get out of bed in the morning. Some report that wearing a Walkman and turning music on in situations associated with freezing, such as crossing a street, is helpful.
  • Divide actions into separate events, which may prevent freezing that occurs from trying to coordinate too many physical operations at one time. For instance, when going through a doorway, approach the door, stop at the door, open it, stop, and then walk through the doorway.
  • A cane equipped with a laser pointer may be helpful, at least temporarily.
  • Simply being touched by another person can sometimes release the patient (although a Parkinson's patient should never be pulled or pushed).

Sleep Deprivation Therapy. Sleep deprivation therapy may have a role in treating some cases of depression and some studies are finding some benefits on the depression, tremor, and rigidity experienced by Parkinson's patients. Scientists believe that sleep deprivation produces certain anticholinergic effects, which may ameliorate both depression and Parkinson's symptoms.

Alexander Technique. The Alexander technique is a method that trains a person to change movement habits in order to release tension and improve balance. A 2002 study reported that it may have sustained benefits for patients with PD.

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