Improved Mobility, Cognition, and Disease Severity in Corticobasal Degeneration of an African American Man After 12 Weeks of Adapted Tango: A Case Study

Corticobasal degeneration (CBD) has no available treatment to slow disease progression and generally resists drug therapy. Corticobasal degeneration has symptoms and decreased quality of life similar to Parkinson disease. Adapted Tango, a successful rehabilitation for Parkinson, may address CBD. A 63-yr-old African American man with CBD (alias: YD; CBD duration = 2 yrs) was evaluated for motor, cognitive, and psychosocial function before, immediately after, 1 mo after, and 6 mos after 12 wks of 20, biweekly 90-min adapted-tango lessons. After intervention, disease-related motor symptoms improved and YD reported fewer problems in nonmotor experiences of daily living, which include mood, cognition, pain, fatigue, etc. Motor symptoms remained above baseline at 6-mo posttest. YD's balance confidence improved after intervention but declined below baseline at 6-mo posttest. Quality of life was maintained despite worsened depression. YD improved or maintained executive function, and visuospatial function and attention at posttest and 1-mo posttest. At posttest, YD maintained mobility and improved on dynamic balance. At 1-mo posttest, most mobility measures had improved relative to baseline. However, YD showed executive function and overall motor decline 6 mos after intervention. Adapted tango may have temporarily slowed disease progression and improved or maintained mobility and cognition. Gains were poorly maintained after 6 mos. Further study is warranted.
Source: American Journal of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation - Category: Rehabilitation Tags: Case Report Source Type: research