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Motor Activity clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06395597 Not yet recruiting - Motor Activity Clinical Trials

Variability of Healthy People and People After Stroke Results in the Nine Hole Peg Test

Start date: June 1, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Main aim of the study is to find out how many attempts of each subtest in the Nine Hole Peg Test should be done in clinical practice during testing people after stroke who are 20-64 years old.

NCT ID: NCT05696535 Not yet recruiting - Motor Activity Clinical Trials

Investigation of the Relationship Between Lower and Upper Extremity Selective Motor Control and Sensory Functions in Children With Spastic Cerebral Palsy

Start date: January 2023
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Although spasticity, contractures and muscle weakness in children with CP are disorders that can be observed more easily and are more focused and given more importance in evaluation and treatment approaches; Inadequate or loss of selective motor control negatively affects motor functions to a greater extent. It is very important to reveal the causes and consequences of selective motor disability in children with spastic cerebral palsy, in terms of creating effective treatment plans. The number of patients to participate in the study was determined as 100. The study will be carried out in Hatay Mustafa Kemal University Research and Application Hospital, Department of Pediatrics. In our study, demographic information will be filled in, and lower extremity selective control assessment scale (SCALE) for lower extremity, upper extremity selective control scale (SCUES) for upper extremity, and sensory assessment (touch, two-point discrimination and proprioceptive sensory assessment) will be performed on the patients who accepted the study.

NCT ID: NCT05669378 Not yet recruiting - Physical Inactivity Clinical Trials

A Good Start Matters Intervention Study

Start date: January 20, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The BC government and partners developed Active Play Standards and a capacity-building strategy to help childcare centers implement the Standards. We have developed an intervention to supplement the governmental capacity-building strategies. The intervention is comprised of implementation support strategies targeted at childcare providers in BC that will aid with the sustainment of Active Play best practices at their facilities. The impact of the intervention will be assessed by measuring its impact on a) change in practices with respect to Active Play; and b) improving child-level outcomes (children's physical activity, sedentary behavior, and motor skill competencies). The findings will inform future policies and enhance our understanding of how policy action supported by communication, capacity-building, and sustainment strategies influence the environment of childcare centres.

NCT ID: NCT05471557 Not yet recruiting - Aging Clinical Trials

Effects of Acute Pain on Motor Learning in Young vs Older Adults

Start date: May 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To date, the effects of pain on motor learning have not been thoroughly investigated, particularly in older adults. Broadly, the purpose of this research is to investigate the impact of acute pain on locomotor learning and its retention in older adults. The investigators hypothesize that acute pain impairs retention of locomotor learning in young and older adults and that in older adults, these deficits are worsened and are related to the degree of normal age-related cognitive decline.

NCT ID: NCT05171036 Not yet recruiting - Aging Clinical Trials

Study of Static and Dynamic Posturographic Elements Predictive of Falls in the Institutionalized Elderly

POSTADYCHUTE
Start date: January 17, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

A fall in the elderly is defined by the WHO as "an event in which a person [over 65 years of age] inadvertently falls to a lower level on the ground or other surface than they were previously at". The severity of the consequences of falls is correlated with the age of the person who suffers them, making people over 65 at risk. Since 2000, the number of falls among the elderly has not decreased, including in institutions. Today, the direct and indirect costs of falls are estimated at 1.7 billion euros in France. The French National Authority for Health (HAS) stresses that the lack of success of prevention policies is due in particular to the lack of evaluation and prevention resources. In nursing homes, this lack of resources is sometimes used to justify passive restraint to ensure the safety of participants. However, this method poses the problem of the free movement of residents within the institution. The fall detection technologies already on the market do not allow for the assessment of the risk of falling and therefore for early action. Based on the latest scientific data in static posturography, researchers at the Borelli Centre have developed posturographic markers whose non-linear analysis makes it possible to establish an objective and clinically relevant score based on the study of the displacement of the centre of pressure. In contrast to the techniques commonly used in the laboratory to study balance (which are not usable in health care institutions because of their cost, lack of transportability and the expertise required to explore the recorded data), this method of measurement allows health care professionals to quickly and easily measure the balance of participants in routine consultations. Thus, special attention and targeted rehabilitation can then be implemented to prevent falls and their consequences.

NCT ID: NCT04496193 Not yet recruiting - Analgesia Clinical Trials

The Effects of Adding Dexamethasone in the Quadratus Lumborum Block

Start date: July 31, 2020
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

The quadratus lumborum block is widely used in abdominal surgery for post-operative analgesia. It is now also used for pain relief after hip surgery. Under the traditional blocking method, a high concentration of long-acting local anesthetic is used in order to achieve a long-term blocking effect. However, this is also likely to cause the patient's quadriceps weakness during the block period, increasing the risk of the patient falling during rehabilitation. It also increases systemic local anesthetic poisoning and may even trigger the risk of serious side effects such as cardiac arrest. Ropivacaine is a novel long-acting topical amine anesthetics that lasts long and has anesthetic and analgesic effects. Its pharmacological characteristics are low cardiotoxicity, sensory block and motor block separation at low concentrations more obvious, and with the external peripheral vasoconstriction. Therefore, the drug is especially suitable for postoperative analgesia. Dexamethasone is a synthetic corticosteroid for the treatment of a wide range of symptoms including rheumatic diseases, certain skin diseases, severe allergies, asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, cerebral edema, and may also be combined with antibiotics for tuberculosis patients. It is becoming more common to use steroids as an adjuvant to local anesthetics in peripheral nerve block. Steroids have neurological blockade effects by blocking the nociceptive transmission of pith-type C-fibers and inhibiting the release of ectopic neurons. Dexamethasone, as a local anesthetic adjuvant in peripheral nerve block, has also been widely studied recently. In order to reduce the incidence of long-acting topical anesthetics from the nerve block in the quadratus lumborum block, reducing the local anesthetic concentration is a feasible method. However, this will also result in a shorter time to neurological block. The investigators hypothesized that the addition of Dexamethasone 5 mg to low concentrations (0.25%) of Ropivacaine would prolong postoperative analgesia. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to compare the postoperative analgesia and the side effects of postoperative quadratus lumborum block with the addition of Dexamethasone 4mg to Ropivacaine (0.25%) in low concentrations and Ropivacaine (0.5%) alone.

NCT ID: NCT04035863 Not yet recruiting - Motor Activity Clinical Trials

Effects of Photobiomodulation on Superficial Sensitivity and Muscle Activity of Individuals With Myelomeningocele

Start date: September 2, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Myelomeningocele is a neural tube defect that occurs between the third and fourth week of gestation. Functional impairment occurs due to dysplasia of the nerve roots, which can lead to flaccid paralysis and sensory-motor dysfunction below the level of the lesion. Although advances in the multidisciplinary treatment of myelomeningocele have led to functional improvements in affected children, novel therapeutic modalities, such as photobiomodulation (PBM), could be a promising complement to treatment. Objective: Evaluate the effectiveness of PBM combined with physiotherapeutic exercises on the sensory-motor response in individuals with myelomeningocele at the lower lumbar and sacral level. Participants will be recruited from the Integrated Health Clinic of University Nove de Julho and randomized into two groups: Grupo 1 - treatment with PBM at a wavelength of 808 nm + physical therapy; Grupo 2 - sham PBM + physical therapy. Evaluations will involve electromyography of the gastrocnemius, tibialis anterior and rectus femoris muscles of both lower limbs. Balance will be evaluated using the Pediatric Balance Scale. The sensory evaluation will be performed using the Semmes-Weinstein monofilament kit (Smiles®). BDNF levels will be determined using ELISA. The data will be analyzed with the aid of GraphPad PRISM version 7.0. The Kolmogorov-Smirnov test will be used to determine the normality of the data. Variables that fit the Gaussian curve will be expressed as mean and standard deviation values. The t-test will be used for the comparisons between groups, with the level of significance set to 95% (p < 0.05).

NCT ID: NCT03739892 Not yet recruiting - Stroke Clinical Trials

Biomarkers to Predict Gain From Therapy in Motor Stroke

GAIN
Start date: November 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim is to determine predictors of treatment response, i.e gain from rehabilitation training, in post stroke upper limb deficits. The investigators will like to answer the following question: "What is this patient's potential for recovery, given his profile?" The investigators propose to conduct a longitudinal physiopathological study on the stroke patients with motor deficits who entered the rehab center of Pitié Salpêtrière hospital. The investigators will benefit from the organization, which is already in place (clinical asssessments and training) to add MRI, TMS and EEG recordings, as well as genotype analysis before the training offered in the rehabilitation unit. The investigators will repeat these assessments after the training (immeadiately and 6 weeks after).

NCT ID: NCT03185338 Not yet recruiting - Motor Activity Clinical Trials

A School-based Physical Activity Promotion Intervention in Children. PREVIENE Project

PREVIENE
Start date: January 9, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Background:The lack of physical activity and increasing time spent in sedentary behaviours during childhood place importance on developing low cost,easy-to-implement school-based interventions to increase physical activity among children. The PREVIENE Project will evaluate the effectiveness of five innovative, simple, and feasible interventions(active commuting to school, Physical Education lessons, active school recess physical activity, sleep health promotion, and an integrated program incorporating all 4 interventions) to improve physical activity, fitness, anthropometry, sleep health, academic achievement,and health-related quality of life in primary school children. Methods:A total of 350 children (grade 3; 8-9 years of age) from six schools in Granada (Spain) will be enrolled in one of the 8-week interventions (one intervention per school; 50 children per school) or a control group (no intervention school; 50 children). Outcomes will include physical activity (measured by accelerometry), physical fitness (assessed using the ALPHA fitness battery), anthropometry (height, weight and waist circumference), sleep health (measured by accelerometers, a sleep diary, and sleep health questionnaires), academic achievement (grades from the official school's records), and health-related quality of life (child and parental questionnaires).To assess the effectiveness of the different interventions on objectively measured PA and the other outcomes, the generalized linear model will be used. Discussion: The PREVIENE Project will provide the information about the effectiveness and implementation of different school-based interventions for physical activity promotion in primary schoolchildren. Keywords:children, physical activity, school,active commuting, Physical Education, school recess, sleep health, fitness, academic achievement, health-related quality of life.

NCT ID: NCT02476344 Not yet recruiting - Motor Activity Clinical Trials

Classification and Characterization of Physical Strains During Sorting Series: Physiological Aspects

Start date: July 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

2 young candidates have tragically died during army pre-recruitment sorting series in 2006. As part of the classification and characterization of the physical aspects of the training, this experiment was requested. We aim at determining the characteristics of physical strains in sorting series, by objective and subjective parameters and evaluating the difficulty levels and intensity of those strains.