Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04885023 |
Other study ID # |
Batterjee Medical College |
Secondary ID |
(TURSP-2020/82) |
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
February 20, 2020 |
Est. completion date |
March 7, 2021 |
Study information
Verified date |
May 2021 |
Source |
Batterjee Medical College |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
This study showed that the addition of hippotherapy to Schroth exercises is more effective in
improving postural asymmetry and balance ability in adolescents with idiopathic scoliosis
compared to Schroth exercises alone. Therefore, this combination should be considered during
designing a rehabilitation program for AIS
Description:
The hippotherapy program started with a physical therapy assessment to develop specific
corrective movements to be practiced while riding the horse based on the direction of the
spinal curvature. Interventions were performed by a licensed physical therapist experienced
with hippotherapy at two local therapeutic riding centers. The participants received 15
sessions split into two phases over 10 weeks. In the first phase, during the first 5 weeks,
they performed 30 minutes of walking and sitting trot training without a stirrup iron once a
week. The frequency was then raised to twice a week for the rest of the treatment program.
Before the start of the intervention, two familiarization sessions were given to clarify
safety guidelines, riding mistakes, and create a riding rapport with the horse. The
individuals wore protective helmets during each hippotherapy session and mounted on a moving
horse on walk and/or trot performing different positions, namely forward astride, side
sitting, backward astride, sometimes with transitions between positions and often while the
horse was moving. To restore normal alignment of the spine, participants were also asked to
ride without holding on with their hands to perform self-correction movements. Examples of
these movements include raising both arms high to decrease the degree of thoracic kyphosis,
bending the upper trunk towards the convex side of the curve, raising the arm on the concave
side with scapular adduction to level both shoulders. To correct pelvic obliquity, a small
pad was put under the hip on the side of the lumbar convexity. Under the instructions of the
physical therapist, a leader pulled the horse reins in front to control the horse gait, gait
velocity, and orient the horse in different directions . All these movements activate the
patient's neuromuscular and sensory reactions.
Both groups performed Schroth exercises that are patient-specific asymmetric exercises with
rotational breathing methods used for three-dimensional correction. For the first 2 weeks,
there were five 1-h long individual sessions during which the participants were trained in
their home exercise program. This was followed by 1-h weekly visits and paired with their
daily home exercises. These exercises aimed to provide and promote enhanced postural control
by using asymmetrical standing postural exercises specifically designed to restore body
balance and mobility. During ground exercises, aid pads were used to build pressure for
costal protrusions and/or trunk asymmetry correction. Postural correction was facilitated by
rotational breathing exercises focusing on the concave side of the thorax. During the therapy
sessions, postural correction principles of the Schroth process, axial elongation,
deflection, de-rotation, facilitation, stabilization, were used.