Motion Videocapture and Treadmill to study Postural Reactivity and Transition: Application to the condition of Dry Immersion in Parkinson's Disease

The purpose of this study was to evaluate technical reliability of a commercially available treadmill to induce slip displacement, which is sufficient to provoke postural reactivity in subjects with Parkinson's disease (PD). These subjects underwent the program of ground-based microgravity mode...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Alexander Meigal, Olesya Tretjakova, Liudmila Gerasimova-Meigal, Kirill Prokhorov, Irina Sayenko
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: FRUCT 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/4bc1a4e7e8574a089d6cbbd6cd6b3378
Etiquetas: Agregar Etiqueta
Sin Etiquetas, Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro!
id oai:doaj.org-article:4bc1a4e7e8574a089d6cbbd6cd6b3378
record_format dspace
spelling oai:doaj.org-article:4bc1a4e7e8574a089d6cbbd6cd6b33782021-11-20T15:59:33ZMotion Videocapture and Treadmill to study Postural Reactivity and Transition: Application to the condition of Dry Immersion in Parkinson's Disease2305-72542343-073710.23919/FRUCT53335.2021.9599994https://doaj.org/article/4bc1a4e7e8574a089d6cbbd6cd6b33782021-10-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.fruct.org/publications/fruct30/files/Mei.pdfhttps://doaj.org/toc/2305-7254https://doaj.org/toc/2343-0737The purpose of this study was to evaluate technical reliability of a commercially available treadmill to induce slip displacement, which is sufficient to provoke postural reactivity in subjects with Parkinson's disease (PD). These subjects underwent the program of ground-based microgravity modeled with ""dry"" immersion (DI). Additionally, in the same study group we assessed the function of postural transition. Both postural reactivity and transition were traced with motion videocapture technique. We found, that at 1 km/hour treadmill did produce acceleration, and, hence heel strike, detectable for motion videocapture. Therefore, from the methodological point of view the study looks promising. However, this acceleration proved 3-4 time lesser than it is usually applied in suchlike studies. In part, this explains for the lack of significant effect of the DI program on the characteristics of postural compensation reactions in subjects with PD. Alternatively, the result could be explained by weak effect of DI on the studied postural functions. For future studies, we regard that inertial measuring units (IMU) and stronger acceleration would better fit the task to study postural reactions in subjects with PD.Alexander MeigalOlesya TretjakovaLiudmila Gerasimova-MeigalKirill ProkhorovIrina SayenkoFRUCTarticlemotion videocapturetreadmillparkinsonismmicrogravitypostural reactiondry immersionTelecommunicationTK5101-6720ENProceedings of the XXth Conference of Open Innovations Association FRUCT, Vol 30, Iss 1, Pp 141-147 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic motion videocapture
treadmill
parkinsonism
microgravity
postural reaction
dry immersion
Telecommunication
TK5101-6720
spellingShingle motion videocapture
treadmill
parkinsonism
microgravity
postural reaction
dry immersion
Telecommunication
TK5101-6720
Alexander Meigal
Olesya Tretjakova
Liudmila Gerasimova-Meigal
Kirill Prokhorov
Irina Sayenko
Motion Videocapture and Treadmill to study Postural Reactivity and Transition: Application to the condition of Dry Immersion in Parkinson's Disease
description The purpose of this study was to evaluate technical reliability of a commercially available treadmill to induce slip displacement, which is sufficient to provoke postural reactivity in subjects with Parkinson's disease (PD). These subjects underwent the program of ground-based microgravity modeled with ""dry"" immersion (DI). Additionally, in the same study group we assessed the function of postural transition. Both postural reactivity and transition were traced with motion videocapture technique. We found, that at 1 km/hour treadmill did produce acceleration, and, hence heel strike, detectable for motion videocapture. Therefore, from the methodological point of view the study looks promising. However, this acceleration proved 3-4 time lesser than it is usually applied in suchlike studies. In part, this explains for the lack of significant effect of the DI program on the characteristics of postural compensation reactions in subjects with PD. Alternatively, the result could be explained by weak effect of DI on the studied postural functions. For future studies, we regard that inertial measuring units (IMU) and stronger acceleration would better fit the task to study postural reactions in subjects with PD.
format article
author Alexander Meigal
Olesya Tretjakova
Liudmila Gerasimova-Meigal
Kirill Prokhorov
Irina Sayenko
author_facet Alexander Meigal
Olesya Tretjakova
Liudmila Gerasimova-Meigal
Kirill Prokhorov
Irina Sayenko
author_sort Alexander Meigal
title Motion Videocapture and Treadmill to study Postural Reactivity and Transition: Application to the condition of Dry Immersion in Parkinson's Disease
title_short Motion Videocapture and Treadmill to study Postural Reactivity and Transition: Application to the condition of Dry Immersion in Parkinson's Disease
title_full Motion Videocapture and Treadmill to study Postural Reactivity and Transition: Application to the condition of Dry Immersion in Parkinson's Disease
title_fullStr Motion Videocapture and Treadmill to study Postural Reactivity and Transition: Application to the condition of Dry Immersion in Parkinson's Disease
title_full_unstemmed Motion Videocapture and Treadmill to study Postural Reactivity and Transition: Application to the condition of Dry Immersion in Parkinson's Disease
title_sort motion videocapture and treadmill to study postural reactivity and transition: application to the condition of dry immersion in parkinson's disease
publisher FRUCT
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/4bc1a4e7e8574a089d6cbbd6cd6b3378
work_keys_str_mv AT alexandermeigal motionvideocaptureandtreadmilltostudyposturalreactivityandtransitionapplicationtotheconditionofdryimmersioninparkinsonsdisease
AT olesyatretjakova motionvideocaptureandtreadmilltostudyposturalreactivityandtransitionapplicationtotheconditionofdryimmersioninparkinsonsdisease
AT liudmilagerasimovameigal motionvideocaptureandtreadmilltostudyposturalreactivityandtransitionapplicationtotheconditionofdryimmersioninparkinsonsdisease
AT kirillprokhorov motionvideocaptureandtreadmilltostudyposturalreactivityandtransitionapplicationtotheconditionofdryimmersioninparkinsonsdisease
AT irinasayenko motionvideocaptureandtreadmilltostudyposturalreactivityandtransitionapplicationtotheconditionofdryimmersioninparkinsonsdisease
_version_ 1718419421482975232