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Pilates
Provides Benefits for Some with Parkinson's
By SARAH
SKIDMORE, Associated Press
PORTLAND, Ore.
- Movements in Pilates exercises are controlled -- sometimes moving
the body only inches -- but those small motions are making a
big difference to some people with Parkinson's disease.
No research
has been done to prove Pilates' effectiveness in
reducing Parkinson's symptoms, but a growing number of
patients say they are finding some relief.
"I love it,
it's great," said Karen Smith, 62. "It exercises muscles that otherwise
don't get exercised."
Parkinson's, a degenerative
disorder, inhibits a person's ability to control movement. Its most
common symptoms include tremors, slowness of movement, rigidity and
poor balance.
Smith is part of a group
that meets twice a week at the Parkinson Center of the Oregon Health
and Science University in Portland. The center held a Pilates pilot
program earlier this year, and after it found improvement in the
participants' rigidity and balance it launched a twice-weekly class
open to the public.
The center already has a waiting list for its next round of classes.
A few Pilates instructors elsewhere around the country also are offering classes specifically for people with the disease.
"It could be any exercise"
that might help people, said Kristi Sesso, owner of the Harmony Group
Pilates and Gyrotonics studio in Englewood, N.J. "But Pilates is a
great point of access."
Instructors say the basic
principal of Pilates -- increasing core strength and improving
flexibility and balance -- is extremely helpful in countering the
effects of Parkinson's in some people.
"I never dreamed of trying
to do Pilates or anything like that," said Greg Moore, 59, who was
diagnosed with Parkinson's 17 years ago and just started practicing
Pilates. "Now I realized how stiff and boxed up I am."
There are studies that show
exercise can ease the severity of Parkinson's symptoms, said Michael S.
Okun, national medical director for the National Medical Foundation.
However, it needs much further research, he said.
"I tell my patients that
exercise is like a drug -- if they exercise religiously or stretch
religiously, they do great," Okun said.
Pilates participants say
the exercises aren't a strain, which makes the program more
approachable for patients who don't exercise at all. Additionally, they
say, it's supportive to be in a positive environment with other people
with Parkinson's.
Many Parkinson's patients struggle with depression and some say the exercise has helped them.
"A lot of times exercise is
as much for the head as it is for the body," said John White of
Corvallis, Ore. "To feel like you can help yourself in some way is
really important."
White, a former track and
wrestling coach, says Parkinson's is a "seven-day-a-week job." But he
says he exercises religiously and it allows him to continue hiking,
golfing and running.
Debi LaVietes Clark, owner
of Body Balance Pilates where White practices, says she is seeing an
increasing number of people brought in by participants who have
described how the program helps with flexibility, agility and balance.
"But what I've noticed,
first and foremost, is confidence," Clark said. "Just because you are
diagnosed with a disease doesn't mean the end of the world."
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