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COMPLETED
NCT07631390
NA

Impact of Task-Specific Electrical Stimulation on Upper Limb Functional Motor Skills in Children With Spastic Quadriplegia

Sponsor: Kafrelsheikh University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Cerebral palsy is a non-progressive lesion of the brain occurring before 2 years of age resulting in disorders of posture and movement.( Ostensjo S, 2004)( Keles MN, 2018) . Although non-progressive, motor impairments develop as the child grows leading to activity and participation restriction. For children with CP, body function and structure impairments include changes in muscle tone and strength that affect the ability to control movement, specifically in regard to postural responses, selective control, regulation of activity, ability to learn unique movements, and inappropriate sequencing.(Ross SA, 2007)( Ostensjo S, 2004) . Lack of proper loading and maladaptive muscle pulls over time causes the skeletal system to adapt to positions of malalignment, malformation, and overall bone weakness (Beckung E, 2007) (Elbasan B, 2018) . These changes lead to delays in the natural progression of gross motor skills. As the child falls behind in motor function, they also fall behind in cognitive stimulation and development.( Akaya KU, 2018) . Understanding the anatomical and physiological implications that CP has on the developing child is necessary for physical therapists to treat this population, especially when utilizing electrical stimulation. Spastic quadriplegia Is a type of cerebral palsy that affects all four limbs and typically involves significant motor impairment. It results from brain damage that occurs before, during, or shortly after birth, affecting the areas of the brain responsible for movement and coordination. Electrical stimulation is a mode of physical therapy that can be utilized in the treatment of various nerve and muscle injuries, in addition to patients with acute and chronic pain. It involves an electrical pulse applied to a muscle or nerve that activates excitable tissue utilizing internal or external electrodes to build muscle strength, reduce pain, as well as create or support limb movement (Kerr C, 2007) .

Key Details

Gender

MALE

Age Range

4 Years - 7 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

30

Start Date

2025-05-01

Completion Date

2026-03-10

Last Updated

2026-06-08

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DEVICE

The Chattanooga Continuum™

The Chattanooga Continuum™ (fig.2) is a portable 2 channel stimulator used by therapists in clinics and patients at home to provide electrical stimulation treatments in pain management (TENS) and neuromuscular stimulation (NMES). By combining TENS with NMES, users can simultaneously help manage pain and enhance exercise,3 thereby shortcutting the traditional muscle recovery cycle. Factor in a choice of program options including customizable waveforms,and you have a highly versatile and user-friendly rehabilitation tool that can help deliver optimal therapeutic outcomes. The Continuum Kit includes a transportation pouch and hand switch.

OTHER

Designed Physical therapy program

The program used a combination of open-and closed-chain exercises. Exercises for facilitating transitions as supine to sit with hand weight bearing , side lying to side sit , side sitting to quadruped, weight bearing exercises as prone on hands on wedge , quadruped with weight shifting and push up exercise for one hour.

Locations (1)

Aalaa Ahmed Farrag

Alexandria, Egypt, Egypt