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Motor Imagery to Facilitate Sensorimotor Relearning After ACL Injury
Sponsor: Lund University
Summary
Anterior cruciate ligament injury is a common issue in sports involving cutting and jumping. Treatment may include surgical intervention followed by physical therapy, or no surgical intervention with the main treatment being physical therapy. Despite meeting physical therapist requirements for return to sport, many athletes do not return to sport. This discrepancy in the physical requirements for returning to physical activity and actually returning to the same physical activity level leads to the question of whether current rehabilitation treatments may be improved upon. One potential method is by integrating mental training into physical rehabilitation. By using mental training and increasing the meaning and relevance of rehabilitation, a person may be preparing more effectively for return to the pace and intensity common during physical activity. In this study, the investigators aim to create and evaluate a model of training which incorporates physical activity-related movement and mental training in order to more effectively prepare people for return to physical activity after anterior cruciate ligament injury. This will be measured by examining functional hop measures, as well as patient-reported outcomes.
Official title: Motor Imagery to Facilitate Sensorimotor Relearning (MOTIFS) After ACL Injury: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
16 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
106
Start Date
2018-03-25
Completion Date
2024-06
Last Updated
2024-04-24
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
MOTIFS
o MOTor Imagery to Facilitate Sensorimotor re-learning (MOTIFS) is an individualized and physical activity-specific integrated model that includes aspects of both neuromuscular training, as used in rehabilitation practices, and Dynamic Motor Imagery (DMI). DMI is a form of mental training in which the participant images him-/herself performing a task from a first-person perspective in order to maximize functional equivalence to the task in question. This includes dynamic, physical movement, as well as mental imaging. The intervention provides a framework for designing individualized, physical activity-specific rehabilitation exercises for knee-injured people.
Locations (1)
Lund University
Lund, Skåne County, Sweden