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Vibrating shoes aid stroke and diabetic patients



   By Anne Harding
 NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Vibrating insoles can improve balance in patients
with stroke or diabetic neuropathy, a common nerve problem that affects
sensation in the feet and elsewhere, Boston researchers report.
 The vibration, adjusted to a sub-sensory level, appears to "tickle" neurons,
making them more sensitive to stimuli that are present during standing, Dr.
James J. Collins of Boston University, the study's lead author, told Reuters
Health.
 Collins and his team had previously shown that sub-sensory mechanical noise
delivered to the feet via the insoles could help people maintain better
balance.
 In the current study, published in the Annals of Neurology, the researchers
tested the effects of the vibrating insoles on sway parameters in 15 patients
with diabetic neuropathy and 15 patients with stroke. Patients stood on the
insoles, which contained two vibrating elements on each forefoot and one on
each heel.
 Data from a previous study of the insoles in 12 healthy elderly patients was
included for comparison.
 The researchers looked at five traditional sway parameters and three derived
from random-walk analysis. All were reduced significantly with the noise
application in all of the patients, the researchers found. And the greater a
patient's baseline level of postural sway, the more balance control improved
with noise input.
 Additional research is needed to investigate how the technology may benefit
patients with stroke affecting different parts of the brain, for example the
right versus the left side of the brain, the researchers add.
 "The main thing that we're focusing on now is testing whether the insoles
provide benefit in dynamic activity such as walking," Collins said. He and
his colleagues have completed prototypes of insoles and shoes incorporating
the vibrating elements, and are planning studies to test them as patients
walk, climb stairs and negotiate other activities of daily living.
 His team also plans to investigate whether the vibrating insoles can help
Parkinson's disease patients and patients with multiple sclerosis.
 SOURCE: Annals of Neurology, January 2006.

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