Idiopathic Scoliosis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effects of Real-Time Feedback Assisted Self-Correction on the Posture of Scoliotic Patients: A Prospective, Monocentric, Randomized With Stratification on the Type of Scoliosis, Comparative and Open-label Study
Scoliosis is a progressive three-dimensional deformation of the spine during growth, with a
prevalence of 80% in girls.
The treatments currently used are surgery and rigid brace, which aim to stabilize scoliosis
evolution. The place of rehabilitation is disputed because the methods are multiple,
non-standardized and the sessions are infrequent.
In a previous study (MOUVSCO, NTC02134704), researchers have identified systematic postural
abnormalities in patients with scoliosis, and developped a virtual-brace (medical device, MD)
to allow real-time self-correction of the trunk position.
The aim of the present study is to evaluate for the first time the efficacy of the
virtual-brace on the correction of the posture of scoliotic patients.
The hypothesis is that intensified rehabilitation with the virtual-brace will improve
pathological postures related to scoliosis.
The present study is the first evaluation of the efficacy of the virtual-brace on scoliotic
patients.
The efficacy of rehabilitation will be estimate on the correction of the posture of scoliosis
patients over 6 months by comparing 2 groups: a control group of patients conventionally
treated with a night-time brace (G0 group_conventional) and an experimental group of patients
wearing a night-time brace, doing postural rehabilitation exercises with the virtual brace
and follow-up visits with a physiotherapist (G1 group_virtual-brace).
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