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Full-Text Articles in Rehabilitation and Therapy
Updated Poster Presentation Abstract (N = 58) From 2020 Combined Sections Meeting Of The American Physical Therapy Association: How Well Do Clinical Walking Measures Predict Natural Walking Behavior In Parkinson Disease?, James T. Cavanaugh, Cristina Colon-Semenza, Tammy Deangelis, Ryan P. Duncan, Daniel Fulford, Martha Hessler, Michael Lavalley, Timothy Nordahl, Lisa Quintiliani, Kerri S. Rawson, Marie Saint-Hilaire, Cathi A. Thomas, Jenna A. Zajac, Gammon M. Earhart, Terry D. Ellis
Updated Poster Presentation Abstract (N = 58) From 2020 Combined Sections Meeting Of The American Physical Therapy Association: How Well Do Clinical Walking Measures Predict Natural Walking Behavior In Parkinson Disease?, James T. Cavanaugh, Cristina Colon-Semenza, Tammy Deangelis, Ryan P. Duncan, Daniel Fulford, Martha Hessler, Michael Lavalley, Timothy Nordahl, Lisa Quintiliani, Kerri S. Rawson, Marie Saint-Hilaire, Cathi A. Thomas, Jenna A. Zajac, Gammon M. Earhart, Terry D. Ellis
Physical Therapy Faculty Publications
Declines in the amount and intensity of natural walking behavior in people with Parkinson disease (PD) may precede declines in motor behavior, gait, and balance. Physical interventions targeting walking behavior in PD may have the greatest impact on slowing the progression of disability. Despite a lack of supporting evidence, however, clinicians may be more likely to rely on quick performance measures of walking speed, capacity, and balance to make inferences about a patient’s walking health, rather than direct measures of natural walking behavior. Our primary purpose, therefore, was to examine the extent to which clinical walking measures might predict natural …