History
The exercises were developed by Heinrich Frenkel, a Swiss neurologist who, one day in 1887, while examining a patient with ataxia, observed the patient's poor performance of the finger-to-nose test. The patient asked Dr Frenkel about the test and was told what it meant and that he did not 'pass' the test. Several months later, on re-examination, the patient showed extraordinary improvement in coordination. Frenkel was astonished by the improvement. He had never seen such an improvement before, which was contradictory to the teaching of the day. When Frenkel asked the patient what had happened in the interval, the patient replied, 'I wanted to pass the test and so I practiced.' This event inspired Frenkel to a general assumption: 'If one patient can reduce his ataxia by practice, why not all? Or at least others?' He immediately started to study the problem in a practical manner.Practice
In his book on ataxia, Frenkel states: "The visual sense is the greatest supporting factor in the treatment". This means the patient must watch their own movements while practicing them. Frenkel's book states that the best way to perform the exercises is to do them for three minutes using some kind of timer so the exercises become less of a chore. Then the patient should do something entirely different and unrelated for fifteen minutes, say read a book or have a chat. At that point the patient goes back to the exercises for another three minutes when it will be found that the skill has improved to a step higher from when the exercises were last done fifteen minutes earlier. It is thought that the fifteen-minute break enables the new neural connections to be created. Frenkel's book posits that these sessions should be done every day for at least six weeks. The patient can treat themself and obviously in the absence of a medical practitioner must do so. However, it is better that a physiotherapist is involved. He or she motivates and guides the patient in how to watch themself move. The therapist may also help the patient move where muscular strength is low. Frenkel states that is very important that the therapist also gives the patient pep talks and motivation. Frenkel asserted that the patient had to be free from opiate and alcohol use, for instance, in order to achieve the required focus of attention.References
{{reflist Medical treatments