Spinal Cord Injury Clinical Trial
Official title:
Randomised Open Study of the Efficiency and Tolerance of the Use of a Corset on the Respiratory Function of Spinal Cord Injury Patients
Corsets are often used in the management of patients with a spinal cord injury. They may help to rigidify the patients' trunk which might help some patients to sit upright; their use may also reduce the sensation of dyspnea some patients have while sitting upright. Due to spinal cord injury, abdominal muscles are weakened which can contribute to alter the respiratory function of the patients. But the corset by rigidifying the abdominal wall can improve the efficiency of the respiratory muscles in some patients and reduce dyspnea in the sitting position for some patients. However, when patients with spinal cord injury are followed over time, one can observe that some patients discontinue corset use. The investigators observed that the patients who pursue the corset use still have a significant improvement of their respiratory function with the corset while the patients who have discontinued the use have improved their respiratory function in the upright position (without the corset). As of now, the investigators do not know whether the use of the corset is discontinued because of a spontaneous improvement of the respiratory function or whether discontinuing the use of the corset may help to develop abdominal spasticity and therefore to improve respiratory function. The investigators seek to investigate this issue in order to optimize the management of patients who present spinal cord injury.
Corsets are widely used in the management of spinal cord injury (SCI) patients. Their use
provides a certain amount of rigidity to the trunk which may help some patients to maintain
posture; they also may contribute when used in combination with contention to reduce
orthostatic hypotension. Last, they may reduce dyspnea and improve respiratory tolerance
while sitting. Indeed, patients with recent SCI worsen their respiratory function in the
sitting position secondary to the hypotonia of abdominal muscles which places the diaphragm
in a lower and less efficient position. The use of a corset rigidifies the abdominal wall
and therefore improves the diaphragm contraction's efficiency leading to an improvement of
vital capacity (VC) and a reduction of dyspnea in the sitting position. But although some
patients continue to use a corset overtime, others discontinue its use. We recently observed
that corset users presented an improvement of VC with corset use proportional to the
improvement of VC observed in the supine position while patients who had discontinued its
use did not exhibit a reduction of VC between the supine and the upright position suggesting
that they presented a more rigid abdominal wall.
It is not known whether corset use discontinuation results from the spontaneous improvement
respiratory function in the upright position or leads to the appearance of abdominal
spasticity and to the improvement of respiratory function.
Therefore, we aim to study the effect of the long term corset use on SCI patients'
respiratory function.
We will conduct a monocentric prospective open study of 56 SCI patients (SCI level ranging
from C5 to T8 ASIA A or B) with a recent lesion (<4 months). The evolution of respiratory
function and dyspnea with and without corset use will be studied over a 2 years period. An
evaluation of spasticity overtime will also be conducted. After randomization (corset use or
not) evaluation will be conducted after 3 months, 6 months, 1 year and 2 years and will
include: pulmonary function test with and without corset in the upright position and in the
supine position, blood gases, dyspnea scores in the different positions and spasticity
assessment.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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