Skip to content

Dance and Huntington Disease

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01842919
Enrollment
53
Registered
2013-04-30
Start date
2013-04-30
Completion date
2016-07-08
Last updated
2025-11-18

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Huntington Disease

Brief summary

In this project investigators will evaluate the benefits of contemporary dance training using a comprehensive test battery combining standard neuropsychological batteries, psychological questionnaires on emotion, empathy and quality of life, structural magnet-resonance tomography (MRI), as well as psychophysical tests on movement recognition and agency, the sense of being in control of one's own movement. For 10 years now two experienced dancer-choreographers lead dance workshops for people with Huntington's Disease (HD) and their family and caregivers in Paris. This project will evaluate objectively the effects these workshops have, by assessing a new group of 18 patients and their partners and caregivers before and after 8 month of weekly dance training. People with HD are troubled by involuntary movements, of which they are however not accurately aware, but moreover they become impaired at recognising instrumental actions in others. It is well known that observing somebody else's action and executing the same action rest on a common neural network. This might mean that improving one's own action execution can improve the observation and understanding of others' actions in turn. Here, investigators will investigate both the impact the movement impairments caused by HD might have on patients themselves as well as on their partners and caregivers, as a consequence of the fact that own and other action representations are shared. After 8 months of contemporary dance training, both groups will be tested again, in order to establish if both action execution (self) and perception (in others) have improved. Other recent psychophysics and brain imaging experiments have demonstrated how the sense of agency is composed from external cues (for example sound) of the consequences of movements, and from internal sensorimotor information that result from the action plan. Importantly, in HD the latter input might be impaired, but this has never been systematically tested. Making use of a psychophysics paradigm disentangling the two cues to agency investigators first monitor the sense of their own movement in HD, and further assess the changes in agency and in the role of these cues to agency after eight months of contemporary dance practice. Finally investigators will monitor the structural brain changes accompanying this progress, comparing the brain before and after regular dance practice and correlating action recognition psychophysics measures of agency with these changes. In sum, this project has a double impact. Firstly it will scientifically evaluate the impact of dance on the normal but especially the brain affected by a neurodegenerative disease that causes movement impairments, and establish its effect on behaviour and wellbeing. Secondly it will evaluate in patient partners and caregivers how they represent the patients' as well as their own movements and how this changes with dance practice.

Interventions

OTHERKinesthetics tests
OTHERstructural Magnetic ResonanceImaging (MRI)

Sponsors

Institut National de la Santé Et de la Recherche Médicale, France
Lead SponsorOTHER_GOV

Study design

Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

Huntington patient * Patients with Huntington's disease (documented by a genetic test.) * Ability and intention to follow the dance workshop of the association Micadanse once a week for 8 months (Total Functional Capacity score (TFC) \> 10). * Have an assisting person who also lends him/herself to the protocol. * Showing no indications against to the achievement of MRI. Assisting person: * No history of neurological or psychiatric disorders. * Showing no indications against to the achievement of MRI.

Exclusion criteria

* Have already taken dance lessons. * Neurological or psychiatric history. * Inability to achieve MRI * History of significant head injury

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Detection scoreDay 1The subject performs movements imposed which are recorded by sensors in the form of bright spots. It shows the participant of bright spots of himself or of another subject of the same sex and must indicate whether of himself or another person. The number of correct answers is calculated and subtracted from the numbers of false positives.

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026