Multiple Sclerosis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Efficacy of a Wheelchair Propulsion Training Program for Manual Wheelchair Users: a Pilot Study
The overall purpose of this project is to test the feasibility of a manual wheelchair propulsion program which aims to reduce the chance of development of upper limbs pain and injury.
The purpose of this project is to develop a feasible wheelchair propulsion training that can
fit into an in-patient rehabilitation schedule, and determine the effectiveness of the
training protocol. This project consists of a randomized control trial (RCT) for manual
wheelchair users (MWUs) that examines the number of manual wheelchair propulsion repetitions
required to produce change. For the RCT, we will recruit twenty individuals who use manual
wheelchairs as their primary means of mobility and who do not follow the recommended clinical
guidelines for propulsion. Participants will be randomized into two independent groups: motor
learning repetitions overground (Training Group; n =10), and general education on recommended
propulsion techniques (Education Group; n =10). Demographics, cognition, shoulder strength,
participation, and wheelchair seating may only be assessed at baseline. Participants then may
be assessed from the kinematics of their wheelchair performance overground and on a motorized
treadmill. Participants may be tested on their wheelchair propulsion techniques in and
outside of the lab, upper extremity pain at baseline, post-intervention, and three-week
follow-up; participants may also be asked qualitative questions regarding the intervention
experience, the experience with the equipment and the laboratory research, the monitoring
setting, and the general experience with the research study.
The primary research question is that will repetition of proper propulsion technique
practiced overground result in improved manual wheelchair propulsion biomechanics?
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