Key Takeaways
- Evidence-based clinical protocols for measurable recovery outcomes
- Specialist-reviewed by Dr. Karolin Rockson, PT (BPT, Ex. CMC Vellore)
- Aligned with NICE, WHO, and current peer-reviewed guidelines
- Practical guidance for Parkinson's patients and caregivers
The Science of Gait Dysfunction in Parkinson's
Parkinson's disease disrupts the basal ganglia's role in initiating and maintaining smooth, continuous movement. The result is a characteristic gait pattern that is immediately recognizable — but treatable.
Types of Parkinson's Gait Problems
Shuffling (reduced step height and length), festination (involuntary acceleration), freezing of gait (complete motor arrest), en bloc turning (turning the whole body as one unit), and reduced arm swing are the main manifestations.
Auditory Cueing with Metronome
External rhythmic cues bypass the damaged basal ganglia, using the cerebellum and motor cortex to drive gait rhythmicity. Walking to a metronome beat at the patient's optimal cadence immediately normalizes stride length and speed.
Visual Cueing Strategies
Parallel floor stripes, laser shoes, and visual targets on the ground provide external reference points that trigger step initiation and maintain stride length during doorway transitions.
Topical Pathways
Navigate the full topical graph for this blog. Every link below is a clinically validated destination, organized by relevance and depth.
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