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NeuroAnimation Used to Support Movement Coordination and Cognitive Wellness in Parkinson’s Disease

NeuroAnimation Used to Support Movement Coordination and Cognitive Wellness in Parkinson’s Disease
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For people living with Parkinson’s who need a program that works on how they move and how they think, at the same time.

For: People living with Parkinson’s disease, their families, and the neurologists and physiotherapists supporting them

The Situation

Parkinson’s disease is progressive. It affects movement, including tremor, stiffness, and slower initiation, but also cognitive function, balance, mood, and quality of life. Conventional physiotherapy helps with motor symptoms. The cognitive dimension and the connection between cognitive and motor function are often left underserved.

For people living with Parkinson’s, a program that only addresses one dimension at a time may be missing what matters most: the integration of thinking and moving that Parkinson’s most disrupts.

“I am moving more slowly. My balance is off. I can feel my thinking changing too. I want something that addresses all of it.”

How Neuroanimation Is Applied

Numerous Parkinson’s clients have completed NeuroAnimation programs and describe this as life changing.

In a clinical trial in Portugal, using the previous version of NeuroAnimation (MindPod Dolphin), is integrated into Parkinson’s wellness programs as an immersive exergaming experience. Participants make high-amplitude 3D arm movements to guide an animated dolphin, a process that is simultaneously physically demanding and cognitively complex. The program runs three times per week in a structured 12-week protocol alongside conventional physiotherapy.

A clinical trial published in the Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation showed that participants in this combined program demonstrated meaningful improvements in cognitive-motor function and that those gains continued building after the formal program ended.

What Participants Have Experienced

  • Improved motor coordination and balance alongside measurable cognitive-motor function gains
  • High satisfaction with the program, with over 80% of participants reporting they would recommend it
  • Sustained benefits after the program concluded, cumulative rather than just immediate
  • A program that feels engaging rather than purely clinical, with 67% completing the full 12-week protocol
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Parkinson’s Clinical Research

What This May Mean For You

For someone living with Parkinson’s, a program that only addresses movement is addressing half the picture. NeuroAnimation is designed to engage your brain and your body simultaneously, because that is how Parkinson’s affects you, and that is how meaningful progress is built.

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