View clinical trials related to Cerebral Palsy.
Filter by:The purpose of this randomized and controlled intervention study is to explore the effect of a physiotherapy intervention targeting contract and spastic hamstring muscles in children having bilateral spastic cerebral palsy (CP), GMFCS I-III: A stretching routine targeting hamstrings (and psoas if short), and a progressive strengthening program on the muscles extending then lower extremities (quadriceps, gluteus maximus and triceps surae) Study hypothesis: Stretching of hamstrings and strength training of the extending muscles in the lower extremities in children with bilateral spastic cerebral palsy will increase popliteal angle, active knee extension, and gait function.
A single-blind Randomized Controlled Trial will be used to test the efficacy of the OPC on self-efficacy and occupational performance with mothers of children with cerebral palsy. Canadian Occupational Performance Measurement and Sherer general self-efficacy scale will be employed to data collection. The sample size was determined for each group of 15 people. The participants conveniently and according to inclusion and exclusion criteria will be randomized into the groups. Participants in the intervention group will be participated in 10 sessions of OPC. At the end the questionnaires will be completed by both groups.
There is no dysphagia spesific and patient/parent centered outcome instrument in the pediatric population. The purpose of this investigation is to develop the Pediatric version of the Eating Assessment Tool (PEDI-EAT-10) and investigate its validity and reliability.
A national database is being set-up to collate clinical outcome information before and after children undergo Selective Dorsal Rhizotomy (SDR). SDR is a surgical procedure that has been used for many years but has not been routinely available within the United Kingdom National Health Service (NHS). The SDR procedure is used to improve spasticity in children with cerebral palsy and involves dividing some of the nerve fibres running from the muscles back to the spinal cord. While it is believed that SDR is effective, there are no definitive data. In July 2014 NHS England commissioned five NHS Trusts to undertake SDR surgery in eligible children for a two-year period, and to collect detailed information on their outcomes. The proposed database will aggregate these data from the five centres and analyse them to provide overall evidence on the clinical effectiveness of SDR. This information will be used to inform future commissioning decisions. The database has been developed by the King's Technology Evaluation Centre (KiTEC) in conjunction with NHS England and the national clinical SDR steering committee and its data subcommittee. KiTEC undertakes research evaluations for the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), and has been commissioned by NICE to undertake this work. Clinicians in the SDR data subgroup have liaised closely with KiTEC to agree which data to collect so that it the least amount needed and will be in a standardised format across all centres. When all two-year outcome data are recorded, KiTEC will analyse the data and present a report to NHS England, NICE and the SDR steering committee and data sub-group. While there are no firm plans to follow the children beyond two years post-surgery, all parties involved are hoping that further funding can be obtained to continue following these children up as these data will be unique.
The ACHIEVE study is a comparison of the effectiveness of 2 intensities of physical therapy treatment for children with Cerebral Palsy in an outpatient physical therapy setting. High intensity periodic is 2 hours of focused and high intense treatment per weekday for 4 weeks. In comparison, usual weekly is considered standard of care; although both dosing models are used clinically for children with CP. Participants are assign to the treatment group at random. Participant who are unable to consent to randomization are allowed to chose a treatment group.
Cerebral palsy (CP) is a group of non-progressive motor dysfunction but often changing, secondary to injury or brain abnormalities that occur in early stages of development. In children with CP, the brain injury lead to a delayed motor development in the first weeks, associated with muscular spasticity. Drug treatments include oral treatments (baclofen and tizanidine) and injectable treatments like Botox (intramuscular injection) and neurolysis with alcohol or phenol (local injection into the nerve). Regarding botulinum toxin, there is no study questioning its effectiveness. However, no publication on the pathophysiology of human muscle of the CP child after toxin injection was found. The action of the toxin on the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) and muscle structure is unknown in children with CP. The primary objective of this study is to describe structural abnormalities of the CP child's muscle following multiple toxin injections in terms of NMJ fragmentation and axonal sprouting. Secondary objectives: To evaluate the relationship between: - The severity of the motor impairment and muscle structural abnormalities. - The clinical measure of spasticity and muscle structural abnormalities. - To compare the structure spastic muscles with toxin injections and spastic muscle without toxin injections For muscles with multiple toxin injections, assessing the relationship between : - The number of toxin injections and muscle structural abnormalities. - The date of the first injection and muscle structural abnormalities. - The total dose of injected toxin in the muscle and its structural abnormalities. - The nature of the product injected in the muscle and its structural abnormalities. This innovative study will improve the knowledge on the effects of long-term botulinum toxin injections on the muscle (and therefore its safety in usual care), on the spastic muscle NMJ of CP children, on the pathophysiology of the CP child's muscle. All the visits all acts will be performed according to usual patient follow-up. Only a biopsy will be performed in addition, taken from an injected muscle during a planned operation. A biopsy may also be performed on a muscle without toxin injection if the act is made possible by the planned surgery. No biopsy will be made on a muscle that would not require surgery.
The specific aims of the study are to: 1. Assess the feasibility of a TytoCare telehealth device with remote audio/video connection for evaluation of children with medical complexity in the home environment. 2. Evaluate the usability of a TytoCare telehealth device in transmitting real time images (otoscope, oropharyngeal exam, camera), temperature, and sound (stethoscope for heart and breath sounds) 3. Compare the impact of the TytoCare telehealth device versus traditional telephone assessment on patient management and user satisfaction
The purpose of this study is to determine if selected sequence training using the Balance Master, added to established physical therapy treatment programs, will increase gait velocity of ambulatory children receiving inpatient or outpatient rehabilitation in relation to their ability to cross an intersection within the confines of community traffic signal (>120 cm/sec).
Cerebral palsy (CP) has been defined as "a group of permanent disorders of the development of movement and posture causing activity limitation(s) that are attributed to non-progressive disturbances that occurred in the developing fetal or infant brain". Investigators previously developed two classification systems, one for the upper limb and one for the hand, based on 100 films of patients with cerebral palsy. Separate classifications were developed following an initial study in which investigators found no correlations between upper limb and hand patterns, meaning that specific upper limb patterns are not always associated with specific hand patterns. Thumb patterns were not included in these classifications since robust classifications already exist, moreover thumb patterns are independent from hand patterns. The aim is to evaluate the inter- and intra-rater reliability of two previously developed classifications of upper limb and hand patterns.
Rehab in a Crate is a therapy gym designed to be affordable, compact and easily transportable. The purpose of this particular study is to gain feedback on the initial design of the Rehab in a Crate system. This will be accomplished by using qualitative ethnographic research methods (i.e. human centered design) in the form of surveys that have been carefully designed by members of the research team. The eligibility criteria of this survey research reflects the intended user base of an eventual finished product, which is survivors of stroke and cerebral palsy across the globe. And while healthcare professionals are not the user base per se, their expertise and feedback should be instrumental in the design of future iterations of the Rehab in a Crate. Ease of use, utility, design, and various features, both existing and intended, will all be surveyed items.