Alzheimer’s patients can benefit from mimicry

Research finds correlation between imitation exercises and patient rehabilitation


Ians April 03, 2016
Imitating a real person is more beneficial for Alzheimer’s patients than working with objects. PHOTO: FILE

LONDON: Imitating movements can help Alzheimer’s patients regain some of the abilities lost due to the memory-impairing brain disorder, reveals an interesting study.

Copying what someone else is doing is a basic social building block that helps people learn. It can also help patients of Alzheimer’s disease, for whom there is neither a cure nor any way to slow down or prevent the illness. “Our results suggest that imitation could be used during rehabilitation of Alzheimer’s patients,” said Ambra Bisio, postdoctoral researcher at the University of Genoa in Italy.

“Alzheimer’s patients are still able to voluntarily imitate the movement of an object as well as that of a human being. If this ability is still in place, a patient could relearn how to perform actions that have become difficult due to the disease,” Bisio noted.

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The findings, published in the journal Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience, showed that ­­— at least for mild stages of the disease — Alzheimer’s patients retained the ability to imitate or mimic a simple gesture by a human or a moving dot on a computer screen. This suggests that such exercises may complement current therapeutic strategies. The study further revealed that patients performed better with a human trainer than they did with a computer, during both physical and cognitive rehabilitation.

Experts suggest that this may be because the emotional response that a patient experiences when interacting with a real person is still more beneficial than it is distracting. The researchers added that the results will help guide better strategies for the rehabilitation of Alzheimer’s patients in the future. 

Published in The Express Tribune, April 4th,  2016.

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