The effect of home exercise on the posture and mobility of people with HAM/TSP: A randomized clinical trial

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Abstract

Background: Physical therapy has positive results in people with tropical spastic paraparesis (TSP). However, mobility and distance from rehabilitation centers limit the participation in outpatient programs. Objective: To evaluate the impact of a home exercise program on the posture and functional mobility of people with TSP. Methods: A randomized controlled trial comparing three groups of people who performed guided exercises from a guidebook for six months: supervised (SG), unsupervised (WG), and control (CG). Primary outcomes: postural angles (SAPO®) and functional mobility (TUG). Secondary outcomes: gait parameters (CVMob®). Results: The protocol described in the guidebook improved postural angles and functional mobility. There were also positive gait parameter effects (p<0.05). SG presented better responses than WG did, but both were preferable to CG. Conclusion: Home exercises oriented by a guidebook may benefit posture, functional mobility and gait parameters in people with TSP, and physiotherapist supervision can ensure better results.

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APA

Mota, R. S., Macêdo, M. C., Corradini, S., Patrício, N. A., Baptista, A. F., & Sá, K. N. (2020). The effect of home exercise on the posture and mobility of people with HAM/TSP: A randomized clinical trial. Arquivos de Neuro-Psiquiatria, 78(3), 149–157. https://doi.org/10.1590/0004-282X20190169

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