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Clinical Trial Summary

This project will determine the feasibility and validity of measuring elbow muscle flexor stiffness in a population of patients with sub-acute severe acquired brain injury using two measurement methods, the portable spasticity assessment device (PSAD) (Movotec, Charlottenlund, Denmark) and an ultrasound measurement called shear wave sonoelastography (SWE).


Clinical Trial Description

The purpose of this study is to investigate the feasibility and validity of measuring hypertonia in the elbow flexors of patients with severe acquired brain injury in their sub-acute rehabilitation and collect data to determine the necessary size for a definitive study to determine the clinimetrics of the test methods. The long-term goal is to establish a valid and clinically feasible method for physiotherapists to quantify muscle tone in patients with neurological disorders.

The study hypotheses are:

1. SWE, PSAD and Modified Ashworth Scale (MAS) measurements can be obtained for elbow flexion hypertonia in all patients (no missing data due to test procedure),

2. SWE and PSAD have a moderate to good intra-day intra-tester reliability (ICC two-way mixed effects model with absolute agreement. ICC>0.5, Bland Altman)

3. Passive muscle stiffness measured using the PSAD and SWE have a fair concurrent validity with MAS (Spearmans correlation >0.3)

4. SWE and PSAD are responsive in measuring a reduction of the effect of routine clinical treatment of the hypertonic muscles with botulinum toxin type A (BTX-A) (paired T-test or Wilcoxon test, p>0.05) ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04207632
Study type Observational
Source Rigshospitalet, Denmark
Contact Derek J Curtis, phd
Phone 004538626683
Email derek.john.curtis@regionh.dk
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase
Start date April 1, 2020
Completion date April 1, 2021

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