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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT06163950
Other study ID # 22CH527
Secondary ID 2022-A02510-43
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date May 2, 2023
Est. completion date October 31, 2024

Study information

Verified date December 2023
Source Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Saint Etienne
Contact Bruno FERNANDEZ, MD
Phone (0)4 77 12 04 67
Email bruno.fernandez@chu-st-etienne.fr
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Due to an early brain injury occurring in antenatal or postnatal, cerebral palsy (CP) causes alteration in motor function with posture and gait disorders. It is commonly observed motor performance degradation during adulthood, and the underlying pathophysiology remains poorly known.


Description:

One of the hypotheses to explain the decline in walking capacities in adults with CP is their greater fatigability, that could be related to energy overconsumption (due to the specific biomechanical constraints of their walking pattern) and/or the occurrence of early sarcopenia affecting the compensatory muscle mechanisms commonly seen in children to compensate for architectural disorders and posture alterations. To optimize prevention and/or therapy in these patients, it is crucial to better understand the aetiology of fatigability and its role in the decline in walking performance.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Recruiting
Enrollment 36
Est. completion date October 31, 2024
Est. primary completion date October 31, 2024
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 18 Years to 50 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: Common for CP and healthy volunteers: - Capable of walking for six minutes without stopping - Capable of consenting to the tests Specific for the CP group - GMFCS I or II at age 18 - Spastic diplegic cerebral palsy Exclusion Criteria: - Counter-indications to the test procedures - Mental retardation or intelligence quotient (IQ) below 80 - Accompanying diseases not allowing for the test setup - Major surgeries altering performance in the last six months - Injection of botulin altering maximal force production in the last three months - Refusing to sign the consent form

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Other:
Fatigability assessment
An isometric dynamometer will be used to assess fatigability development during a task to failure. Throughout the task, which consists of blocks of 3 minutes, neuromuscular assessments will take place to determine the evolution of fatigability and its peripheral and central determinants.

Locations

Country Name City State
France Centre Hospitalier de Saint-Etienne Saint-Étienne

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Saint Etienne

Country where clinical trial is conducted

France, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Neuromuscular fatigue Neuromuscular fatigue, defined as the decrease in maximal voluntary force (in % of the resting value) developed in isometric knee extension following a standardized fatigue protocol. Week : 6
Secondary Maximum voluntary force torque measurement of the knee flexor muscles Measurement of the (in Nm) of the knee flexor muscles in isometric and dynamic contraction. Week : 2
Secondary Maximum voluntary force torque measurement of the plantar flexor Measurement of the (in Nm) of the plantar flexor in isometric and dynamic contraction. Week : 2
Secondary Maximum voluntary force torque measurement of knee extensor muscles Measurement of the (in Nm) of the knee extensor muscles in isometric and dynamic contraction. Week : 4
Secondary Level of voluntary activation measurement Measurement of the level of voluntary activation (in %) determined by the force increment obtained following electrical stimulation of the motor nerve during a muscle condition of maximum contraction. Week : 6
Secondary Measurement of joint amplitude (in °) Evaluation of the passive muscular properties of the dominant leg, on the knee flexor muscles, and on the plantar flexor and knee extensor muscles Week : 6
Secondary Measurement of passive torque (in Nm) Evaluation of the passive muscular properties of the dominant leg, on the knee flexor muscles, and on the plantar flexor and knee extensor muscles Week : 6
Secondary Evaluation of neuromuscular fatigue The decrease in muscle twitch evoked by electrical nerve stimulation (in %) (peripheral fatigue) Week : 6
Secondary VO2max (in mL/min/kg) Cardiorespiratory capacity will be assessed by measuring maximal oxygen consumption (VO2max (in mL/min/kg)) in an incremental cyclo-ergometer test. Week : 6
Secondary The distance covered (in m) in the 6-minute walking test Quantitative walking performance will be assessed by measuring the distance covered (in m) in the 6-minute walking test Week : 6
Secondary Time (in seconds) taken during the 10-meter walk test Quantitative walking performance will be assessed by measuring the time (in seconds) taken during the 10-meter walk test Week : 6
Secondary Time (in s) taken in the "Get Up and Go" test Quantitative walking performance will be assessed by measuring the time (in s) taken in the "Get Up and Go" test Week : 6
Secondary Walking Quality evaluation The quality of walking will be evaluated (only in CP subjects) by a Quantified Gait Analysis (QGA) allowing the measurement of spatio-temporal parameters, joint kinematics and kinetics as well as muscle activity during walking. will be evaluated (only in CP subjects) by a Quantified Gait Analysis (QGA) allowing the measurement of spatio-temporal parameters, joint kinematics and kinetics as well as muscle activity during walking. Week : 6
Secondary Berg Balance Scale Postural control (or balance) will be assessed (only in CP subjects) by the Berg Balance Scale (BBS) score. This score, ranging from 0 to 56, is an index to measure functional balance.
0 means high risk of falling; person needs a wheelchair 56 means no risk of falling; the person has functional balance
Week : 6
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