Cerebral Palsy, Spastic, Diplegic Clinical Trial
Official title:
Stretching and Strength Training for Children With Cerebral Palsy -an Intervention Study
Verified date | December 2016 |
Source | Oslo University Hospital |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | Norway: Regional Ethics Commitee |
Study type | Interventional |
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.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 34 |
Est. completion date | October 2016 |
Est. primary completion date | October 2016 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 8 Years to 15 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Spastic bilateral cerebral palsy GMFCS I-III (ability to walk without aid for 10 m) - Popliteal angle = 35° Exclusion Criteria: - No surgical lengthening on hamstrings or bilateral triceps surae - No surgical intervention on the lower extremities one year prior to inclusion - No surgical intervention on the lower extremities one year prior to inclusion - Surgical operations which is planned for the upcoming year - No botulinum injections in hamstrings or other muscles in the lower extremities the last 6 month prior to inclusion. - External rotation in the hips = 5° - < 90° passive ankle dorsal flexion in the ankles on a extended knee - Reduced ability to cooperate or receive instructions |
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Norway | Oslo University Hospital | Oslo |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Oslo University Hospital |
Norway,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change in Hamstrings length/popliteal angle (R1 in MTS) | The tests are conducted with the child lying supine on a bench in a silent examination room and the measurements are done using a plastic goniometer, commonly used for joint and muscle measurements in the clinic. Two testers are doing the tests and they are a test team. If there is a contracture in the hip a pillow is placed under the knee to keep the lumbar spine straight. One tester is performing the stretch on hamstrings and the other tester is reading of the degrees on the goniometer. The pivot point for the flexion/extension axis in the knee is over the lateral condyle of femur. The aiming point for the longitudinal axis in femur is trochanter major and the aiming point for the longitudinal axis in tibia is the medial malleolus. The stationary arm on the goniometer is placed over femurs longitudinal axis and the moving arm is placed along with tibias longitudinal axis.The test is done three times and an average is calculated. |
Measured at baseline, after 16 weeks and 32 weeks | No |
Secondary | Change in Active popliteal angle | This measures quadriceps ability to extend the knee into the last range of motion. It is performed in the same position as the two tests above. The child is told to stretch out the leg as much as he or she is able to (hip is hold in 90 deg by the tester). The other tester is holding the goniometer as described above and is registering the range of motion. The test is done three times and an average is calculated. | Measured at baseline, after 16 weeks and 32 weeks | No |
Secondary | Change in Hamstrings catch (R2 modified Tardieu Scale (MTS)) | The tester is holding the actual leg, flexing the hip to 90 deg. The knee is extended and flexed slowly for two repetitions to make the child as calm and relaxed as possible, and the knee is extended fast. The quick and fast stop (catch) is measured and registered by the other tester. This test is extensively used for registration of spasticity in children with CP 18. The catch measure is only performed ones as it may change with several provocations. | Measured at baseline, after 16 weeks and 32 weeks | No |
Secondary | Changes in Three dimensional gait analysis (3DGA) | Two skilled testers are responsible for the testing. Reflecting markers are placed on the skin according to Hellen Hays full body plug-in model. One tester is placing the markers, the other is checking and it is complete when both agree on the placement. The children are instructed to walk in a self-selected gait speed across a 10 m pathway in the lab. With infra-red light, six cameras on the wall are registrating the reflex markers attached to the children's body. The child is asked to walk back and forth between to cones placed on the floor until 5 good gait cycles is registered, meaning that the child hits two force plates in the floor by left and right foot. | Measured at baseline, after 16 weeks and 32 weeks | No |
Secondary | Change in Cybex 6000, Strength test | Measured at baseline, after 16 weeks and 32 weeks | No | |
Secondary | Changes in Pediatric quality of life questionaire 4.0 (PedsQL) | It is a self-reported Quality Of Life questionaire containing 23 questions, in 4 categories: Physical functioning, emotional functioning, social functioning and school functioning. The different themes gives a sum score between 0-100. Scale scores are computed as the sum of the items divided by the number of items answered. In addition to the four subscales, two summary scores can be computed: Physical Health Summary score (8 items) Psychosocial Health Summary score (15 items) | Measured at baseline, after 16 weeks and 32 weeks | No |
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