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Physical Rehabilitation clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Physical Rehabilitation.

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NCT ID: NCT05274152 Completed - Virtual Reality Clinical Trials

Using Immersive Virtual Reality for Children's Lower Limb Rehabilitation

Start date: December 12, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Patients who have undergone lower limb or knee surgery are often required to participate in rehabilitative exercises to regain or maximise movement and function in the affected leg. Physiotherapy interventions for rehabilitation can be painful, uncomfortable, and tedious, reducing compliance and limiting the movement and function achieved by the patient. Clinical studies have reported improvements in pain, compliance and outcomes by incorporating Virtual Reality (VR) into care. Evidence suggests that more Immersive VR (IVR) is effective in rehabilitation, while being cost-effective, with few adverse side-effects. Previous research by this team with adult burn patients and paediatric upper limb rehabilitation patients indicate that IVR could help reduce pain, increase compliance and improve care experiences and outcomes. The objective of the study is to investigate the feasibility and perceived impact of the Immersive Virtual Reality (IVR) intervention as a tool in physiotherapy rehabilitation for children (aged 11-16) after lower limb or knee surgery.

NCT ID: NCT04538248 Completed - Clinical trials for Chronic Kidney Diseases

Efficiency of Combined Rehabilitation Programs Including Resistance and Endurance Exercises on Functional Capacities, Quality of Life and Daily Level of Activities in Hemodialysis Patients

DIALEX
Start date: August 1, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Hemodialysis patients display among the lowest level of daily activities and decline of functional abilities is highly correlated with mortality. Perdialytic exercise during hemodialysis procedure is now part of the patients' routine care and appears to be a solution to struggle against the functional skills decrease. Our team was able to demonstrate that beyond muscle mass, muscle strength and physical activity were essential determinants of morbidity and mortality of dialysis patients. The AIDER Santé medical team has set up an assessment of physical activities and muscle strength in the Montpellier and Nimes centers. In order to rehabilitate muscle strength and endurance, perdialytic exercise may be prescribed. Its effectiveness can be appreciated by measuring the SPPB score (Short Physical Performance Battery). Recent studies established that combined training including resistance and endurance exercises was the most effective to improve functional performance. In AIDER Santé dialysis centers, the two mainly used exercise approaches are distinguished by the time distribution of the two types of exercise: the first plans to practice both types of exercise at each session (continuous program), the second plans to alternate a week of resistance exercise with a week of endurance exercise (discontinuous program). It is established that the rehabilitation of the hemodialysis patient must include both resistance and endurance exercises, but the combination of these exercises during the same session is potentially at the origin of an interference phenomenon, limiting neuromuscular adaptations specific to each effort. Therefore, the main hypothesis of the project is that the temporal separation of resistance and endurance exercises in a discontinuous program could optimize the functional gains of combined rehabilitation and therefore be more effective than a continuous program generating a phenomenon of interference.

NCT ID: NCT02764905 Completed - Clinical trials for Cognitive Rehabilitation

Intensive Cognitive and Physical Rehabilitation Program

Start date: November 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This will be a feasibility study. Individuals that have undergone an evaluation day at the center for successful aging with diabetes with a Glycosylated hemoglobin (A1C) of >=7.5 and a Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA)<26 will be approached and invited to participate. The participants will be divided into 2 groups: 1) information communication technology (ICT) group - an intervention based on weekly SMS that will remind the individual to implement his personal treatment plan and will raise the awareness to the importance of self-care in diabetes; 2) intensive cognitive-physical rehabilitation group that will include a 2 phase multi-disciplinary intervention. The 2 phases: a) Intensive phase: weekly 4 hour group meeting which will include computerized cognitive training, aerobic, balance and strength exercise and group discussion that will be dedicated to cognitive rehabilitation strategies development and implementation with emphasis on disease management and physical activity as well as psycho-education on various disease management aspects (medical and nutritional) b) a consolidation phase: monthly 2 hour group discussions on challenges of implementation and coping strategies. Outcomes will include change in A1C (primary), change in strength, aerobic capacity as well as quality of life and cognitive function (secondary). Additionally, team members and participants will fill out a structured questionnaire regarding their evaluation of the program aiming at refinement of the intervention.

NCT ID: NCT02373748 Completed - Clinical trials for Physical Rehabilitation

Performance of the BioGaming Device (YuGo) in the Support of Physical Rehabilitation

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

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the movements performed according to the BioGaming YuGo software, and verify that they are rehabilitation movements.