PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Cavanaugh, James T. AU - Ellis, Terry D. AU - Earhart, Gammon M. AU - Ford, Matthew P. AU - Foreman, K. Bo AU - Dibble, Leland E. TI - Toward Understanding Ambulatory Activity Decline in Parkinson Disease DP - 2015 Aug 01 TA - Physical Therapy PG - 1142--1150 VI - 95 IP - 8 4099 - http://jcore-reference.highwire.org/content/95/8/1142.short 4100 - http://jcore-reference.highwire.org/content/95/8/1142.full SO - Phys Ther2015 Aug 01; 95 AB - Background Declining ambulatory activity represents an important facet of disablement in Parkinson disease (PD).Objective The primary study aim was to compare the 2-year trajectory of ambulatory activity decline with concurrently evolving facets of disability in a small cohort of people with PD. The secondary aim was to identify baseline variables associated with ambulatory activity at 1- and 2-year follow-up assessments.Design This was a prospective, longitudinal cohort study.Methods Seventeen people with PD (Hoehn and Yahr stages 1–3) were recruited from 2 outpatient settings. Ambulatory activity data were collected at baseline and at 1- and 2-year annual assessments. Motor, mood, balance, gait, upper extremity function, quality of life, self-efficacy, and levodopa equivalent daily dose data and data on activities of daily living also were collected.Results Participants displayed significant 1- and 2-year declines in the amount and intensity of ambulatory activity concurrently with increasing levodopa equivalent daily dose. Worsening motor symptoms and slowing of gait were apparent only after 2 years. Concurrent changes in the remaining clinical variables were not observed. Baseline ambulatory activity and physical performance variables had the strongest relationships with 1- and 2-year mean daily steps.Limitations The sample was small and homogeneous.Conclusions Future research that combines ambulatory activity monitoring with a broader and more balanced array of measures would further illuminate the dynamic interactions among evolving facets of disablement and help determine the extent to which sustained patterns of recommended daily physical activity might slow the rate of disablement in PD.