Mobility and Walking Issues
MS can affect one’s ability to move freely and easily. Fluctuations in mobility can often occur with MS, and these limitations can lead to falls and other safety issues. Mobility is impacted by several factors, including heat sensitivity, fatigue, weakness, and balance problems.
Exercise and physical activity can help to reduce problems with mobility. Mobility aids can improve walking and balance, and environmental modifications can also increase safety and independence. Consulting a physical therapist who is experienced with MS can greatly assist with improving both mobility and safety, which ultimately improves one’s quality of life.
Introduction
Mobility is the ability to move or be moved freely and easily as well as safely. Because of your MS, your mobility can vary daily – and even hourly. Medical professionals who treat individuals with MS will often hear such comments as:
- “My foot drags, making it challenging to walk to my child’s ballgame.”
- “When it’s hot outside, I melt in the heat. My body becomes very weak and moving my legs is difficult.”
- “My partner exerts a great deal of energy to walk and move around, causing extreme fatigue. By the end of the week, socializing and other activities are just not possible.”
- “I worry about my balance issues and possibly having a fall, especially when no one else is home.”
Mobility challenges common in MS:
- Transitional movements, such as when one moves to and from sitting and standing positions, from chair to chair, or when rolling over in bed and other mobility problems when lying down
- Walking issues, which include such challenges as foot drop, knee instability (buckling or hyperextension), spasticity, and weakness
- Balance and fall risk; these issues impact the ability to safely sit, stand, and walk
- Fatigue, which greatly affects mobility and can at times be overwhelming
- Navigating steps, staircases and other variations in walking surfaces
- Wheeled mobility, including transferring in and out of a wheelchair or scooter and access to appropriate spaces designed for wheeled mobility
- Activities of Daily Living encompass a wide range of actions, virtually all of which require some degree of mobility; examples include cooking, cleaning, dressing, bathing, and driving
Optimizing mobility in the face of MS challenges is possible by engaging your healthcare team, specifically your neurologist, nurse practitioner, physiatrist, and a physical therapist (PT) and/or occupational therapist (OT). To follow are the roles that these specialists play:
- The neurologist and nurse practitioner consider treatments that can influence movements, such as medications for fatigue, bowel and bladder problems, or for other health conditions.
- A physiatrist is a physician who specializes in movement and often provides guidance around spasticity-management strategies.
- The PT and OT focus on exercises, mobility aids, as well as environmental adaptations and adaptive equipment
Exercise and Physical Activity for People with MS of All Ability Levels
Current Exercise & Physical Activity recommendations (general guidelines):
- Flexibility and Range of Motion
- These exercises should be done daily, two-to-three sets, holding each set for 30-60 seconds
- Resistance Training
- Two-to-three sessions per week, one-to-three sets per session, eight to 15 repetitions for each set
- Tip: These exercises can be divided into fewer repetitions or completed intermittently throughout the day
- Tip: Alternate sides as well as upper and lower body exercises to allow more rest time
- Cardiovascular Activity
- Two-to-three sessions per week, 10-to-30 minutes each session at a moderate intensity
- Tip: These sessions can be completed intermittently throughout the day
- Balance Training
- Function and situation specific, as determined by one’s medial professional (such as a physical therapist), with all activities focused on reducing and preventing the risk of falling
Exercise Resources
- Can Do MS offers MS Moves®, a program designed for individuals with MS to build an exercise routine through exercise videos, monthly Zoom meetings, and other resources.
- Yoga Moves MS is a nonprofit organization that seeks to increase the quality of life for individuals with neuromuscular conditions, including Multiple Sclerosis, by providing live, online adaptive yoga classes at no charge.
Common Barriers and Possible Solutions
- Time – Schedule exercise; intermittently perform exercise throughout the day
- Fatigue – Use of cooling devices before and during workout sessions; menu of exercise options for “good days” and “fatigue days”; intermittently perform exercise throughout the day
- Motivation – Social system; substitute motivation with routine; menu of options to keep engaged
Mobility Aids for Walking and Balance
Using adaptive equipment or mobility aids are not “giving in” to the disease; instead, it is taking charge and optimizing your mobility by using tools. The most suitable equipment for you will make you feel safer, less fatigued, and optimize your independence, allowing you to live a full and active life.
Tools to optimize walking and balance
- Two-wheeled walker, four-wheeled walker, cane, trekking poles
- Braces
- Ankle-foot orthoses; examples include rigid, hinged, and carbon-fiber
- Functional Electrical Stimulation Devices, which help to improve foot drop, gait, and hand function; these include name brands such as Walkaide® and Bioness®
- Hip Flexion Assist Device
- Wheeled mobility
- Manual or power wheelchairs, scooters
- Tip: Wheelchairs and scooters can be used selectively as a tool to preserve or conserve energy in certain situations
- Other
- The Portable Neuromodulation Stimulator (PoNS®) is a device that uses innovative FDA-approved technology designed to improve function in people with neurological disorders by treating gait and balance issues; it uses a controller and a mouthpiece to mildly stimulate the tongue’s surface, which in turn improves the flow of nerve impulses to the area of the brain that controls motor function
- Neuromuscular electrical stimulation devices
Environmental Modifications
Changes to your environment can improve safety and independence. An occupational therapist (OT) can evaluate your home and work environments to help you determine what tools and modifications will help you optimize your mobility.
Home
- Bathroom; examples of safety items include grab bars, raised toilet seat, and a tub-transfer bench
- Kitchen; examples of helpful tools include grip gadgets, modified cutting boards, rocker bottom knives, wide grip utensils
Work
- Changes to office equipment include computer/desk ergonomics to minimize fatigue and standing desks to help with spasticity
Vehicle
- Several items are available to assist with driving; examples include hand controls and custom driver seats
Other Mobility Considerations
Deconditioning
Deconditioning is reduced physical mobility resulting from limited physical activity and can affect muscle strength and endurance, balance, and cardiovascular fitness. It can contribute to fatigue and diminished confidence with movements often contributing to an increased risk for falls.
Fatigue Management Using the “Four P’s”
- PRIORITIZE
- Select which projects and chores are of the greatest importance and which can wait for another day. Attempting too many activities can be exhausting and cause significant fatigue and weakness – increasing the risk for falls and injury.
- PLAN AHEAD
- Once priorities have been set, planning ahead can be extremely helpful for conserving energy and minimizing the risk of fatigue. If doing activities at home, gather supplies in advance and place a chair nearby on which to rest if needed. If running errands or doing other activities away from home, try to plan errands and activities that are nearby one another, to reduce travel time and exertion.
- PACE YOURSELF
- Moving at a comfortable pace, and resting when needed, are key to preserving energy and avoiding fatigue. Rushing through chores or over-exerting while participating in various activities will lead to fatigue and weakness. Once the day’s energy has been depleted, recouping can be very difficult if not impossible.
- POSITION
- Position plays a big role in the amount of energy needed to complete a task. If having to bend over or reach far, this can put extra strain on the body – and extra strain can cause fatigue and shortness of breath. Assistive devices such as reachers and dressing aids can remove much of the burden. Additionally, sitting or standing upright allows for maximum lung expansion and oxygen intake.
Shoes
Shoes should be lightweight, supportive, and have an enclosed heel. A rubber sole can add to stability, however, rubber soles or sneakers may not be appropriate for everyone, particularly in the presence of foot drop, because a rubber sole can cause the foot to occasionally stick.
Closing Notes
Safe, independent movement with MS may be challenging for many individuals. This can result in a marked decrease in overall activity – which leads to preventable disuse weakness and deconditioning. If inactivity continues, other problems can develop.
Everyone should have the goal of achieving, and then maintaining, the highest possible level of independent function. This includes safe mobility – both at home and in the community. Having an evaluation from a physical therapist (PT) experienced in MS care is both helpful and recommended.
Achieving and maintaining smooth, safe, and independent ambulation will certainly result in improved health and quality of life. However, when that is not possible, many different types of aids, devices, and wheeled options are available for those with limited abilities.
Information updated September 2023 by Mandy Rohrig, PT, DPT, MSCS, Can Do Multiple Sclerosis
Original content by Patricia G. Provance, PT, MSCS