JANINI CHEN

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
9
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
P IOT, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina
Instituto de Ortopedia e Traumatologia, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina
LIM/45 - Laboratório de Fisiopatologia Neurocirúrgica, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 8 de 8
  • article 23 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Gait, posture and cognition in Parkinson's disease
    (2016) BARBOSA, Alessandra Ferreira; CHEN, Janini; FREITAG, Fernanda; VALENTE, Debora; SOUZA, Carolina de Oliveira; VOOS, Mariana Callil; CHIEN, Hsin Fen
    ABSTRACT Gait disorders and postural instability are the leading causes of falls and disability in Parkinson's disease (PD). Cognition plays an important role in postural control and may interfere with gait and posture assessment and treatment. It is important to recognize gait, posture and balance dysfunctions by choosing proper assessment tools for PD. Patients at higher risk of falling must be referred for rehabilitation as early as possible, because antiparkinsonian drugs and surgery do not improve gait and posture in PD.
  • article 22 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Cognitive or Cognitive-Motor Executive Function Tasks? Evaluating Verbal Fluency Measures in People with Parkinson's Disease
    (2017) BARBOSA, Alessandra Ferreira; VOOS, Mariana Callil; CHEN, Janini; FRANCATO, Debora Cristina Valente; SOUZA, Carolina de Oliveira; BARBOSA, Egberto Reis; CHIEN, Hsin Fen; MANSUR, Leticia Lessa
    Introduction. Executive function deficits are observed in people with Parkinson's disease (PD) from early stages and have great impact on daily living activities. Verbal fluency and oral diadochokinesia involve phonarticulatory coordination, response inhibition, and phonological processing and may also be affected in people with PD. This study aimed to describe the performance of PD patients and an age-and education-matched control group on executive function, verbal fluency, and oral diadochokinesia tests and to investigate possible relationships between them. Methods. Forty people with PD and forty controls were evaluated with Trail Making Test (TMT, executive function) and phonemic/semantic verbal fluency and oral diadochokinesia (/pataka/) tests. Groups were compared by ANOVA and relationships were investigated by Pearson tests. Results. People with PD showed longer times in parts A and B of TMT. They also said fewer words in phonemic/semantic verbal fluency tests and less syllables in the diadochokinesia test. Oral diadochokinesia strongly correlated to parts A and B of TMT and to phonemic verbal fluency. Conclusion. Oral diadochokinesia was correlated to executive function and verbal fluency. The cognitive-motor interaction in verbal fluency and oral diadochokinesia must be considered not to overestimate the cognitive or motor impairments in people with PD.
  • article 16 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Relationship Between Posturography, Clinical Balance and Executive Function in Parkinson ' s Disease
    (2019) SOUZA, Carolina de Oliveira; VOOS, Mariana Callil; BARBOSA, Alessandra Ferreira; CHEN, Janini; FRANCATO, Debora Cristina Valente; MILOSEVIC, Matija; POPOVIC, Milos; FONOFF, Erich Talamoni; CHIEN, Hsin Fen; BARBOSA, Egberto Reis
    This study aimed to evaluate the relationship between posturography, clinical balance, and executive function tests in Parkinson ' s disease (PD). Seventy-one people participated in the study. Static posturography evaluated the center of pressure fluctuations in quiet standing and dynamic posturography assessed sit-to-stand, tandem walk, and step over an obstacle. Functional balance was evaluated by Berg Balance Scale, MiniBESTest, and Timed Up and Go test. Executive function was assessed by Trail Making Test (TMT) and semantic verbal fluency test. Step over obstacle measures (percentage of body weight transfer and movement time) were moderately correlated to Timed Up and Go, part B of TMT and semantic verbal fluency (r > 0.40; p < 0.05 in all relationships). Stepping over an obstacle assesses the responses to internal perturbations. Participants with shorter movement times and higher percentage of body weight transfer (higher lift up index) on this task were also faster in Timed Up and Go, part B of TMT, and semantic verbal fluency. All these tasks require executive function (problem solving, sequencing, shifting attention), which is affected by PD and contribute to postural assessment.
  • conferenceObject
    Executive function and verbal fluency in patients with Parkinson's disease
    (2016) BARBOSA, A. F.; VOOS, M. C.; SOUZA, C. O.; CHEN, J.; CHIEN, H. F.; FRANCATO, D. V.; BARBOSA, E. R.; MANSUR, L. L.
  • article 21 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    The competition with a concurrent cognitive task affects posturographic measures in patients with Parkinson disease
    (2015) BARBOSA, Alessandra Ferreira; SOUZA, Carolina de Oliveira; CHEN, Janini; FRANCATO, Debora Valente; CAROMANO, Fatima Aparecida; CHIEN, Hsin Fen; BARBOSA, Egberto Reis; GREVE, Julia Maria D'Andrea; VOOS, Mariana Callil
    Objectives: To estimate the impact of a sensory-motor-cognitive task on postural balance, in Parkinson disease patients (Hoehn and Yahr 2-3) and to investigate possible relationships between posturography and functional balance clinical scales. Method: Parkinson disease patients (n = 40) and healthy controls (n = 27) were evaluated with fluency tests, Berg Balance scale, Mini Best test and static posturography on the conditions eyes open, eyes closed and dual-task (simultaneous balance and fluency tasks). Results: Posturographic data showed that Parkinson disease patients performed worse than controls in all evaluations. In general, balance on dual-task was significantly poorer than balance with eyes closed. Posturographic data were weakly correlated to clinical balance scales. Conclusion: In clinical practice, Parkinson disease patients are commonly assessed with eyes closed, to sensitize balance. Our study showed that adding a cognitive task is even more effective. Static posturographic data should be carefully overgeneralized to infer functional balance impairments.
  • article 12 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Is virtual reality beneficial for dual-task gait training in patients with Parkinson's disease? A systematic review
    (2019) FREITAG, Fernanda; BRUCKI, Sonia Maria Dozzi; BARBOSA, Alessandra Ferreira; CHEN, Janini; SOUZA, Carolina de Oliveira; VALENTE, Débora Francato; CHIEN, Hsin Fen; BEDESCHI, Cynthia; VOOS, Mariana Callil
    ABSTRACT This systematic review examined the evidence about the effects of virtual reality (VR) on dual-task gait training in Parkinson's disease (PD). Methods: this study (PROSPERO registration CRD42019114736) aimed to answer the question: “Is VR beneficial for dual-task gait training in patients with PD?” We searched for studies from 2008 to 2018 on Medline/PubMed and Web of Science/Web of knowledge databases. The keywords were Parkinson AND gait training AND virtual reality OR Parkinson AND gait training AND game. A total of 55 articles were retrieved, of which 11 systematic reviews, 11 opinions, letters to the editor, posters or conferences abstracts and 17 studies not evaluating the effects of VR gait training were excluded. Three further studies addressing VR dual-task gait training in PD (found in references of studies selected) were also included. Therefore, 19 studies were included and analysed. Results: all studies reported gait improvement after VR training. Many clinical scales were used, hampering comparison of the effects of each protocol. Conclusion: VR dual-task gait training should be part of rehabilitation protocols for PD. The studies showed that VR training was effective, although specific guidelines have not yet been established.
  • conferenceObject
    The addition of a cognitive task influences the performance of static balance and upper limb dexterity tasks in Parkinson's disease
    (2015) SOUZA, C. O.; BARBOSA, A. F.; VOOS, M. C.; CHIEN, H. F.; CHEN, J.; FRANCATO, D. V.; FONOFF, E. T.; BARBOSA, E. R.
  • conferenceObject
    Resistance Training on Postural Control in Parkinson's Disease: a Randomized Controlled Trial
    (2020) SOUZA, C.; CHEN, J.; FRANCATO, D.; BARBOSA, A.; VOOS, M.; BARBOSA, E.; CHIEN, H.