Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

INTRODUCTION: Clubfoot, drop foot or clubfoot, is a disorder that prevents reaching 100º of dorsiflexion actively. Its etiology is varied, and may be due to congenital problems, direct alteration of the bone structure, spasticity or shortening of the posterior musculature (triceps suralis), a neurological factor or a combination of several. Thus, we can differentiate between congenital clubfoot and acquired clubfoot. Stroke is one of the main causes of acquired clubfoot, which is due to paralysis of the dorsiflexor musculature and/or spasticity of the plantar flexor musculature. Electrical stimulation is able to increase muscle activation by depolarization of the motor plate and modulation of nerve conduction. This can be done transcutaneously, through surface electrodes or percutaneously through needles, so neuromodulation is presented as a tool applicable to the pathology of the equine foot, if we take into account the increased activation of the dorsiflexors of the foot. OBJECTIVE: The main objective is to evaluate which of the techniques, percutaneous or transcutaneous, is more effective for the approach of clubfoot in post-stroke patients. METHODOLOGY: a clinical trial with randomized probabilistic assignment in four groups is proposed: G1 (percutaneous neuromodulation): patients will receive a needle circuit approaching the deep peroneal nerve in an ultrasound-guided manner. They will receive a 20-30Hz symmetrical biphasic current; G2 (transcutaneous neuromodulation): patients will have a superficial electrode circuit placed over the belly of the tibialis anterior muscle. They will receive a symmetrical biphasic current of 20-30Hz; G3 (placebo-percutaneous group): in which the patients will receive the neuromodulation circuit with needles at 0 intensity; G2 (placebo-transcutaneous group): the patients will receive the electrodes at 0 intensity over the belly of the tibialis anterior muscle. The variables to be analyzed are: anthropometric variables (age, weight, height, BMI), muscle oxygenation (SatO2, O2Hb, HHb and THb), muscle strength of the foot dorsiflexors measured with dynamometer, muscle activation by surface electromyography, active and passive joint balance with goniometry or inclinometer, assessment of gait and balance, assessment of load distribution by static and dynamic pressure platform, spasticity and questionnaire on quality of life and functionality. The acute effects after one intervention session (pre-post intervention of one session) and the effects after a 10-session program will be analyzed.


Clinical Trial Description

n/a


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT06365931
Study type Interventional
Source University of Extremadura
Contact
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date February 16, 2024
Completion date April 30, 2024

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT05570682 - Manually Controlled Infusion vs Target Controlled Infusion for StrokeThrombectomy N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05588947 - The Tele-Taking Charge After Stroke Randomized Controlled Feasibility Trial N/A
Recruiting NCT04504214 - Tendon Vibrations Effect on Upper Limb Motor Recovery After Recent Stroke N/A
Recruiting NCT06179745 - BCI Driving FES and Hand Orthosis for Upper Limb Rehabilitation in Chronic Stroke N/A
Recruiting NCT04188522 - Imaging Post-Stroke Recovery: Using MEG to Evaluate Cognition
Recruiting NCT06291480 - Music Therapy After Stroke (Subacute Phase) N/A
Recruiting NCT05878457 - Accelerated rTMS for Post-Stroke Apathy Phase 1
Recruiting NCT05657392 - Quantitative EEG Changes Following Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation in Patients With Post Stroke (EEG-rTMS) N/A
Temporarily not available NCT05522569 - Expanded Access Multi-Patient Experimental Treatment Involving Allogeneic Human Mesenchymal Stem Cells (hMSCs) in Subjects With Acute Ischemic Stroke (EXPAND)