The Effect of Body Awareness Therapy on Postural Stability, Balance and Fear of Falling in Patients With COPD
NCT ID: NCT04212676
Last Updated: 2019-12-27
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
NA
32 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2020-02-29
2022-02-28
Brief Summary
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Body Awareness Therapy (BAQ) is an alternative method developed by French exercise instructor and psychotherapist Jacques Dropsy in the early 1970s following the emergence of the concept of body awareness, adapted to rehabilitation programs by Swedish and Norwegian physiotherapists. Traditional physiotherapy methods are the basis of BAQ. In the treatment, sensory stimulation and movement quality, rhythm, coordination, breathing, relaxation, balance, coordination and proprioceptive exercises give more space. In the literature, BAQ decreases pain, fatigue, eating and sleep problems in chronic musculoskeletal or rheumatic pain, coronary artery disease and neurological patient groups. It is seen to increase the quality of exercise, coordination, balance, postural control, quality of life and the integration between mind-body. Movement awareness and mind-body-behavior interaction developed in BAQ can help regulate emotional, mental, social and behavioral factors that affect health. In addition to improving coping skills and cognitive behaviors among COPD patients, it can contribute to positive gains in better movement, respiratory control and balance. The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of BAQ, which is integrated into 8-week pulmonary rehabilitation sessions, on postural stability, balance and fall conditions.
Detailed Description
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Body Awareness Therapy (BAT) is an alternative method developed by French exercise instructor and psychotherapist Jacques Dropsy in the early 1970s following the emergence of the concept of body awareness and adapted to rehabilitation programs by Swedish and Norwegian physiotherapists. Traditional physiotherapy methods are the basis of BAT. Focusing on the senses, proprioceptive exercises aiming to improve the quality of movement, rhythm and coordination with sensory stimuli. BAT treats the individual physically, physiologically, psychologically and socially with a holistic approach and the treatment program is shaped according to the patient's needs. Breathing exercises, relaxation exercises, movement approaches specific to sensory awareness, positioning, stabilization, improving rhythm and coordination, and improving the ability to perform the exercise with maximum awareness are used in physiotherapy methods used in BAT. It consists of specific exercises, which include focusing on how the body is used during movements, aiming at improving one's awareness, ability to be careful, and quality of movement. In the literature, it is seen that Body Awareness Therapy reduces pain, fatigue, eating and sleep problems in various patient groups and increases the quality, coordination, balance, postural control, quality of life and mind-body integration of the exercise.
VFT has been gaining popularity in recent years among many health professionals, especially physiotherapists. In BAT, movement is expressed by how one copes with the balance of the person and associates himself / herself with the place and vertical axis in relation to the environment. The integrity of postural stability is essential for comfortable breathing and awareness, key points for dynamic balance, and quality of movement. Although VFT consists of simple repetitive movements that maintain the ability to use stability limits, its main component is to increase the individual's awareness of his / her movements. Thanks to the neuroplasticity of the brain; multiple slow repetitive movements allow the participant to experience the body and its limits. Movement consciousness that develops by cortical processing of information about movement in the brain and facilitation of proprioceptive; postural control improves balance and coordination. In many cases that require treatment as a principled movement training technique behind mind-body interaction, which emphasizes motion teaching based on sensory motor awareness and cognitive perception of movement. BAT aims to normalize posture, balance, muscular tension and stiffness. Experiences learned by patients help them divide difficult movements into simpler, lighter movements with less energy consumption. Movement awareness and mind-body interaction during movement therapy can help regulate emotional, mental, social and behavioral factors that affect health. In addition to improving coping skills and cognitive behaviors among COPD patients, investigators think that integrating them into pulmonary rehabilitation sessions can have positive effects on postural stability, balance and fall, as they can help them move better and help postural control and thus improve their ability to perform daily living activities.
Conditions
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Keywords
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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PR+BAT Group
In addition to the PR program, the BAT will be administered to the experimental group by a physiotherapist with 5 years of experience in BAT for 8 weeks.
Body Awareness Therapy
The BAT for the participants was based on the works of Roxendal and Dropsy. Activities include relaxation exercises, breathing exercises, floor exercises for trunk and pelvic movements, weight transfer using extremities and proprioceptive movements. Movements will be made in various positions to determine the centerline of the body. All exercises will be started in the supine position to maximize proprioceptive motion feedback and minimize energy requirements during tasks. Movements will be taught in a series of lessons over a period of 8 weeks with advance advancement of selected movements depending on participant comfort.
Pulmonary Rehabilitation
Diaphragmatic breathing exercise Thoracic expansion exercises (Chest breathing and bilateral segmental breathing exercises) Inductive spirometry (Triflo®) exercise Cough development techniques
PR Group
Patients in the control groups will receive a 30-minute Pulmonary Rehabilitation (PR) program every day of the week for 8 weeks.
Pulmonary Rehabilitation
Diaphragmatic breathing exercise Thoracic expansion exercises (Chest breathing and bilateral segmental breathing exercises) Inductive spirometry (Triflo®) exercise Cough development techniques
Interventions
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Body Awareness Therapy
The BAT for the participants was based on the works of Roxendal and Dropsy. Activities include relaxation exercises, breathing exercises, floor exercises for trunk and pelvic movements, weight transfer using extremities and proprioceptive movements. Movements will be made in various positions to determine the centerline of the body. All exercises will be started in the supine position to maximize proprioceptive motion feedback and minimize energy requirements during tasks. Movements will be taught in a series of lessons over a period of 8 weeks with advance advancement of selected movements depending on participant comfort.
Pulmonary Rehabilitation
Diaphragmatic breathing exercise Thoracic expansion exercises (Chest breathing and bilateral segmental breathing exercises) Inductive spirometry (Triflo®) exercise Cough development techniques
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Age between 40-80 years
* Clinically stable period
* No serious hearing and vision problems
Exclusion Criteria
* Having cognitive impairment (less than 24 Mini Mental Test scores)
* Having diagnosed vision, hearing, vestibular or neurological problems that may affect balance
* Having diagnosed orthopedic problems affecting mobility or having a history of surgical intervention
* COPD patients receiving home oxygen therapy or frequent need of oxygen therapy
* Patients with exercise-induced dyspnea
* Patients with primary pulmonary hypertension or patients with pulmonary embolism
* Congestive heart failure and severe coronary patients with coronary artery disease or by-pass surgery due to coronary artery disease
* Patients with morbid obesity
* Presence of systemic disease involving the lung and lung that would previously cause dyspnea other than COPD
* Having received pulmonary rehabilitation in the last 12 months
* Presence of unstable cardiovascular disease
* SpO2\<90%
* Problems with understanding and co-operation in understanding tests
40 Years
80 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Marmara University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Seda Karaca, MsC
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Marmara University
Aysel Yıldız Özer, Ass.Prof.Dr.
Role: STUDY_CHAIR
Marmara University
Sait Karakurt, Prof. Dr.
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
Marmara University
Locations
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Marmara University
Istanbul, , Turkey (Türkiye)
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Seda Karaca
Role: primary
References
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Karaca S, Yildiz Ozer A, Karakurt S, Polat MG. Effects of body awareness therapy on balance and fear of falling in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a randomized controlled trial. Biopsychosoc Med. 2024 Feb 26;18(1):6. doi: 10.1186/s13030-024-00303-x.
Other Identifiers
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09.2019.1031
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id