How Movement Therapy Can Help with Mobility in Parkinsons Disease Why Movement Therapy Ma…
How Movement Therapy Can Help with Mobility in Parkinsons Disease
Why Movement Therapy Matters in Parkinsons:
Parkinsons disease causes motor symptoms like stiffness, slowed movement (bradykinesia), tremors, and balance issues.
These impairments limit mobility and daily functioning.
Movement therapy targets these challenges to improve movement efficiency and independence.
Key Benefits of Movement Therapy for Parkinsons:
1. Improves Gait and Balance
Exercises focus on stride length, weight shifting, and postural control.
Reduces risk of falls by enhancing stability and coordination.
2. Increases Range of Motion and Reduces Rigidity
Stretching and mobilization ease muscle stiffness.
Helps maintain joint flexibility.
3. Enhances Functional Movement
Movement therapy trains everyday motions like standing up, turning, and reaching.
Improves ease and safety in daily activities.
4. Boosts Cardiovascular and Respiratory Fitness
Aerobic exercises improve overall stamina and energy levels.
5. Supports Neuroplasticity
Repetitive, purposeful movements encourage brain rewiring, potentially slowing symptom progression.
Recommended Movement Therapy Techniques for Parkinsons:
Technique Purpose
Balance Training Improve stability and prevent falls
Gait Training Enhance walking speed, stride, and rhythm
Stretching Reduce muscle rigidity
Strengthening Exercises Support posture and movement control
Tai Chi / Dance Promote coordination and fluidity
Cueing Strategies Use auditory or visual cues to improve movement initiation
Sample Parkinsons Movement Therapy Routine
Warm-up with gentle marching in place 5 minutes
Dynamic stretching (neck, shoulders, hips) 5 minutes
Balance exercises (single-leg stands, heel-to-toe walk) 5-10 minutes
Gait drills (walking with exaggerated steps, stepping over obstacles) 10 minutes
Strength training focusing on core and legs 10 minutes
Cool-down with deep breathing and relaxation 5 minutes
Tips for Parkinsons Movement Therapy:
Practice regularly (daily or several times per week).
Use cues (metronome, music) to improve rhythm.
Focus on large, deliberate movements.
Work with a therapist specialized in neurological conditions if possible.






