Parkinson’s patients improve balance with tai chi
PEOPLE
with Parkinson’s disease who practised the Chinese martial art tai chi for six
months showed better balance than those who did other forms of exercise, said a
US study.
A total of 195 people took part in the
randomised study in four different cities in the western state of Oregon,
according to the results published in the New
England Journal Of Medicine.
Subjects were assigned to twice weekly
sessions of 60 minutes each in either tai chi, resistance training or
stretching.
Those who did tai chi outperformed the stretching
and resistance training groups in tests of balance and length of stride when
walking.
The tai chi group also experienced fewer
falls than the stretchers, and just as many falls as the resistance trainers.
“These results are clinically
significant because they suggest that tai chi, a low to moderate impact
exercise, may be used, as an add on to current physical therapies, to address
some of the key clinical problems in Parkinson’s disease,” said lead author
Fuzhong Li of the Oregon Research Institute.
“The improvements in the balance and
gait measures that we demonstrated highlight the potential of tai chi based
movements in rehabilitating patients with these types of problems.”
Tai chi entails regular practise of deep
breathing and relaxation techniques, combined with slow and gentle movements.
It is based on tenets in Confusion and
Buddhist philosophies that there are two opposing life forces, yin and yang,
which govern health.
Ill health results from an imbalance in
these forces, but it can be corrected by tai chi, according to these beliefs.
Parkinson’s is a progressive motor
system disorder which usually affects people over the age of 50, although it
can strike earlier, often causing severe symptoms including body trembling,
stiffness and loss of balance.-AFP-Relaxnews
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