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Nintendo Wii May Enhance Parkinson's Treatment
ScienceDaily (June 11, 2009) -

The Nintendo Wii may help treat symptoms of Parkinson's disease, including 
depression, a Medical College of Georgia researcher says.

Parkinson's disease is a degenerative disease that impairs motor skills. Dr. 
Herz theorized that the popular computer game console, which simulates 
various sports and activities, could improve coordination, reflexes and 
other movement-related skills, but he found additional benefits as well.

"The Wii allows patients to work in a virtual environment that's safe, fun 
and motivational," says Dr. Ben Herz, program director and assistant 
professor in the School of Allied Health Sciences Department of Occupational 
Therapy. "The games require visual perception, eye-hand coordination, 
figure-ground relationships and sequenced movement, so it's a huge treatment 
tool from an occupational therapy perspective."

In an eight-week pilot study, 20 Parkinson's patients spent an hour playing 
the Wii three times a week for four weeks. The patients, all in a stage of 
the disease in which both body sides are affected but with no significant 
gait disturbance yet, played two games each of tennis and bowling and one 
game of boxing-games entailing exercise, bilateral movement, balance and 
fast pace.

"By the middle of the study, we actually had a number of people who could 
[defeat] their opponent out in the first round, which amazed us," says Dr. 
Herz, who presented his preliminary findings at the fifth annual Games for 
Health Conference today in Boston.
The victories weren't the biggest surprise, however. Participants showed 
significant improvements in rigidity, movement, fine motor skills and energy 
levels. Perhaps most impressively, most participants' depression levels 
decreased to zero.

An estimated 45 percent of Parkinson's patients are reported to suffer from 
depression, though Dr. Herz suspects the actual figure is much higher.

Studies have shown that exercise and video games independently can increase 
the production of dopamine, a neurotransmitter deficient in Parkinson's 
patients. He suspects that's the case with the Wii's exercise effect. 
Dopamine also helps improve voluntary, functional movements, which Parkinson's 
patients "use or lose," Dr. Herz says.

Wii, which features simulated movements such as cracking an egg, swinging a 
tennis racket and throwing a bowling ball, responds to a player's movements 
rather than cues from a controller, so players can do full body movements 
and see their progress on a screen.
"I think we're going to be using virtual reality and games a lot more 
because it provides a controlled physical environment that allows patients 
to participate in the activities they need or want to do. A patient doesn't 
have to go to a bowling alley and worry about environmental problems or 
distractions," Dr. Herz says.

Dr. Herz's research was funded by a $45,000 grant from the National 
Parkinson's Foundation. Next he plans to test the Wii Fit balance board with 
Parkinson's patients and expand his studies to multiple sites.

"Game systems are the future of rehab," Dr. Herz says. "About 60 percent of 
the study participants decided to buy a Wii for themselves. That speaks 
volumes for how this made them feel."

Rayilyn Brown
Director AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
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