Mangiarelli Rehabilitation Physical Therapy Blog

Benefits of Therapeutic Boxing for Parkinson’s Disease

Parkinson’s disease is a multifaceted neurodegenerative disease that impairs movement, coordination, and cognitive function over time. Physical therapy-led exercise is a critical component of managing Parkinson’s disease, helping to manage symptoms, and even slowing progression of the disease. Therapeutic boxing is a unique targeted exercise therapy, requiring full-body movement, combining upper-body punching sequences with lower-body footwork to build strength, counter rigidity, and improve hand-eye coordination, balance, posture, and agility. Mangiarelli Rehabilitation physical therapist Bobby demonstrates therapeutic boxing with a Parkinson’s patient on the blog!

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Multiple Sclerosis, Exercise, Physical Therapy, Neuromuscular Therapy Mangiarelli Rehabilitation Multiple Sclerosis, Exercise, Physical Therapy, Neuromuscular Therapy Mangiarelli Rehabilitation

Exercise Rehabilitation for Multiple Sclerosis

Multiple sclerosis is a progressive neurological disease in which the immune system attacks the protective covering of the brain and spinal cord, causing damage to nerves and leading to a variety of cognitive and physical impairments. From early stage through disease progression, physical therapy-led exercise rehabilitation can reduce functional dysfunction in MS patients, manage and address symptoms like fatigue and spasticity, slow progression of the disease, and improve quality of life.

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Multiple Sclerosis, Physical Therapy, Neuromuscular Therapy Mangiarelli Rehabilitation Multiple Sclerosis, Physical Therapy, Neuromuscular Therapy Mangiarelli Rehabilitation

Managing Multiple Sclerosis with Physical Therapy

Exercise rehabilitation under the supervision of a physical therapist can help multiple sclerosis patients conserve and regain functional abilities, manage symptoms, and improve quality of life. Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic neurological disease that affects the central nervous system and can lead to physical and cognitive impairments. Research suggests that targeted exercise rehabilitation may be the single most effective non-pharmacological symptomatic treatment for multiple sclerosis. A structured rehabilitation program can improve mobility, muscle strength, aerobic capacity, and quality of life in multiple sclerosis patients.

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