How exercise is vital to staving off parkinson’s

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Exercise reduces tremors, limb rigidity, slowness of movement and balance, scientists have said. The study of 128 patients found it prevented the devastating symptoms from worsening for at


least six months – and the benefit could last longer. Participants who indulged in short bursts of hard physical activity were 15 per cent better off than those who remained sedentary –


enough to make a difference to their quality of life. Daniel Corcos, professor of physical therapy and human movement sciences at Northwestern University in Chicago, said: “If you have


Parkinson’s disease and you want to delay the progression of your symptoms you should exercise three times a week. It’s that simple.”  Parkinson’s is the second commonest neurological


condition – behind Alzheimer’s – and blights the lives of 127,000 people in Britain and more than a million in America. In the study published in JAMA Neurology, the 40 to 80-year-old


participants were assigned to three exercise sessions a week, at either “high intensity”, “moderate” or “not at all”. After six months they were rated on a Parkinson’s disease scale ranging


from 0 to 108 – with the higher the figure, the more severe the symptoms.  Participants in the study had a score of about 20 before exercise.