RESEARCH PAPER
Evaluating climbing interventions for Parkinson's disease: a systematic review.
AI Summary
Systematic review of three small studies (total n=102) finds climbing is a feasible exercise for people with Parkinson's and may modestly improve motor symptoms, but evidence is limited by small samples, heterogeneous methods, and scant mechanistic or non-motor data.
Why It Matters
Provides preliminary clinical evidence supporting climbing as a rehabilitative option for PD patients, but offers little mechanistic, biomarker, or translational insight for therapeutic drug discovery, so its immediate value for drug development is low though useful for designing larger rehab…
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Exercise ameliorates symptoms and may modify disease progression in people with Parkinson's disease (PD). Climbing is an increasingly popular form of exercise with characteristics that may be well suited to addressing the symptoms of PD. This systematic review aims to synthesize and evaluate climbing-based intervention studies for PD.
METHODS: This review was not registered. A literature search was conducted on July 1, 2025, using Web of Science, PsycINFO, PubMed, and Google Scholar.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: Five articles representing three studies and 102 distinct participants with PD met these criteria. The risk of bias was evaluated using the 20-point Methodological Quality of Exercise Training Studies Scale. The results of the included articles were combined into a narrative synthesis. Methodologies of the reviewed articles included randomized controlled trials, pilot studies, and feasibility studies. The results suggested that climbing is an acceptable and feasible form of exercise for people with PD. Climbing may also ameliorate Parkinsonian motor symptoms, including symptoms measured using wearable technologies. Participant experiences of climbing and the effects on non-motor symptoms remain under-examined. Major limitations of the current literature are the small number of publications and small respective sample sizes. Future research examining the feasibility and physiological responses to different types of climbing, as well as comparing climbing to other exercise types and treatment approaches, may help clinicians establish recommendations related to therapeutic climbing for people with PD.