Motor learning, retention and transfer after virtual-reality-based training in Parkinson's disease – effect of motor and cognitive demands of games: a longitudinal, controlled clinical study?

Abstract

Objectives

To evaluate the learning, retention and transfer of performance improvements after Nintendo Wii Fit™ training in patients with Parkinson's disease and healthy elderly people.

Design

Longitudinal, controlled clinical study.

Participants

Sixteen patients with early-stage Parkinson's disease and 11 healthy elderly people.

Interventions

Warm-up exercises and Wii Fit training that involved training motor (shifts centre of gravity and step alternation) and cognitive skills. A follow-up evaluative Wii Fit session was held 60 days after the end of training. Participants performed a functional reach test before and after training as a measure of learning transfer.

Main outcome measures

Learning and retention were determined based on the scores of 10 Wii Fit games over eight sessions. Transfer of learning was assessed after training using the functional reach test.

Results

Patients with Parkinson's disease showed no deficit in learning or retention on seven of the 10 games, despite showing poorer performance on five games compared with the healthy elderly group. Patients with Parkinson's disease showed marked learning deficits on three other games, independent of poorer initial performance. This deficit appears to be associated with cognitive demands of the games which require decision-making, response inhibition, divided attention and working memory. Finally, patients with Parkinson's disease were able to transfer motor ability trained on the games to a similar untrained task.

Conclusions

The ability of patients with Parkinson's disease to learn, retain and transfer performance improvements after training on the Nintendo Wii Fit depends largely on the demands, particularly cognitive demands, of the games involved, reiterating the importance of game selection for rehabilitation purposes.

Citation

Motor learning, retention and transfer after virtual-reality-based training in Parkinson's disease – effect of motor and cognitive demands of games: a longitudinal, controlled clinical study     Felipe Augusto dos Santos Mendes, José Eduardo Pompeu, Alexandra Modenesi Lobo, Keyte Guedes da Silva, Tatiana de Paula Oliveira, Andrea Peterson Zomignani, Maria Elisa Pimentel Piemonte
Physiotherapy - September 2012 (Vol. 98, Issue 3, Pages 217-223, DOI: 10.1016/j.physio.2012.06.001)