recoveriX for
Parkinson's Disease Rehabilitation

recoveriX Parkinson’s rehabilitation is designed to activate neuroplasticity,
helping the brain relearn movement patterns and improve motor control.

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stock image parkinsons disease glass of water in hand tremor

Why Rehabilitation Matters in Parkinson’s Disease

Parkinson’s disease affects movement, coordination, and independence but targeted neurorehabilitation can significantly improve daily function.

Parkinson’s is progressive, but functional decline is not inevitable. recoveriX focuses on retraining the brain, not just compensating for symptoms. With recoveriX, patients can:

  • Improve movement initiation and coordination
  • Reduce rigidity and movement hesitation
  • Enhance balance and walking stability
  • Regain independence in everyday activities

How recoveriX Works

recoveriX combines:

  • Brain-computer interface (BCI)
  • Motor imagination training
  • Functional electrical stimulation (FES)

The system detects when a patient imagines a movement. It then stimulates the muscles to execute that movement in real time. This creates a powerful loop between: intention → brain activation → physical movement. 

Repeated thousands of times, recoveriX strengthens neural pathways and restores motor function.

recoveriX Parkinson’s therapy targets core symptoms

Key Rehabilitation Benefits

Motor Function

Patients improve hand and arm coordination through targeted training. Fine motor control becomes more precise, enabling activities such as writing or buttoning. In addition, movement speed and fluidity increase, resulting in smoother and more controlled actions.

Gait & Mobility

Walking becomes faster, more stable, and more secure. Patients develop better posture and improved step control, which enhances overall movement quality. Episodes of freezing are reduced, allowing for more continuous and confident mobility.

Daily Activities

Patients find it easier to perform fundamental movements such as standing, turning, and sitting. Independence in routine daily tasks increases significantly. Overall mobility improves, supporting a more active and self-sufficient lifestyle.

Cognitive-Motor Connection

Concentration and motor planning abilities are enhanced through the training process. Patients develop a stronger coordination between thinking and movement, leading to more efficient and intentional actions.

How recoveriX Improves Movement

recoveriX targets both upper and lower limbs to restore functional movement in everyday life.

Upper limb rehabilitation focuses on improving precision movements, enhancing dexterity and coordination, and reducing rigidity in the hands and arms. This allows patients to regain control over fine motor tasks and daily activities.

Lower limb and gait training improves walking speed and rhythm, strengthens balance and posture, and enables safer, more confident mobility.

At the core of this approach is neuroplasticity, it’s the brain’s ability to adapt and reorganize. Even with Parkinson’s disease, the brain can relearn movement patterns.

recoveriX supports this by:

  • Delivering thousands of targeted movement repetitions
  • Reinforcing correct motor patterns
  • Strengthening communication between the brain and muscles

With consistent recoveriX training, improvements continue over time, supporting long-term functional gains.

A Structured Path to Measurable Progress

recoveriX rehabilitation is designed to support patients at every stage of Parkinson’s disease.

  • In the early stage, the goal is to maintain mobility and build strong motor patterns.
  • In the mid stage, therapy focuses on improving coordination, walking ability, and independence.
  • In the advanced stage, the priority is to preserve remaining mobility and enhance quality of life.

 

 

Progress is continuously tracked using standardized clinical assessments, including:

  • Timed Up & Go (TUG)
  • 10 Meter Walk Test (10MWT)
  • Box and Block Test (BBT)
  • Nine Hole Peg Test (9HPT)

This ensures that improvements are objective, measurable, and clearly visible.

 

 

Unlike conventional therapy, recoveriX directly involves brain activity, linking intention with movement execution. This accelerates relearning and creates a more efficient and engaging rehabilitation process.

The result is a structured, science-based pathway that helps patients move better, gain confidence, and live more independently.

Results of recoveriX Training in Parkinson’s Disease

recoveriX Before–After Results

Mrs. Drechsler learned about recoveriX Neurorehabilitation for stroke and multiple sclerosis and decided to try it for her Parkinson’s disease. After training, she experienced noticeable improvements, including better concentration, faster gait, and improved movement control. These changes were especially visible in her darts performance, where she demonstrated greater focus and precision. Motivated to actively support her health and physical function, she values recoveriX as an innovative approach that helped enhance her daily mobility and coordination.

This client presents with Parkinson’s disease. Upon commencement of recoveriX training, she experienced symptoms including edema in her lower extremities, numbness in her fingers, and disrupted sleep patterns attributed to painful muscle spasticity. recoveriX training helped her to relieve her symptoms dramatically!

Here this Parkinson’s disease client performed the Box and Block Test which evaluates manual dexterity and gross motor skills by assessing how many wooden blocks a participant can transfer from one compartment to another within a set time frame. It’s commonly used in rehabilitation to track progress and tailor treatment plans for individuals with upper extremity impairments.

The Parkinson’s disease patient performed the timed up and go test here. This test assesses mobility and requires balance and coordination. The test measures the time, in seconds, it takes a patient to get up from a chair, walk 3 meters, turn around and sit down again.

This client performed the 10 meter walk test is a clinical assessment used to measure an individual’s walking speed over a short distance, employed to evaluate mobility and functional capacity.

The client performed the timed up and go test here. This test assesses mobility and requires balance and coordination. The test measures the time, in seconds, it takes a client to get up from a chair, walk 3 meters, turn around and sit down again.

The Parkinson’s disease patient performed the timed up and go test here. This test assesses mobility and requires balance and coordination. The test measures the time, in seconds, it takes a patient to get up from a chair, walk 3 meters, turn around and sit down again.

The Parkinson’s disease client performed the timed up and go test here. This test assesses mobility and requires balance and coordination. The test measures the time, in seconds, it takes a patient to get up from a chair, walk 3 meters, turn around and sit down again.