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Effects of Motor Cognitive Training on Functional Loss After Osteoporotic Wrist Fractures

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Osteoporotic Distal Radius Fracture
Interventions
Behavioral: motor cognitive therapies
Registration Number
NCT01394809
Lead Sponsor
University of Stuttgart
Brief Summary

The therapy results after distal radius fracture especially of elderly patients are often suboptimal. The central problem results from the inevitable, 3-6-weeks immobilization, which leads to reduction in ROM of the wrist, deterioration of muscle strength as well as malfunction of fine motor skills and coordination. Currently, there are no adequate proactive strategies to counteract these immobilisation problems. Hence the overall aim of our research project is to investigate the therapeutic potential of a motor-cognitive therapy on hand function after distal radius fracture. On the one hand the pilot study should provide information about the level of recruitment rate necessitated for an adequate sample size which allows reliable evidence for the therapy effects. On the other hand we want to evaluate the sensitivity and adequacy of the assessment instruments.

The pilot is conceived as a controlled, randomised, longitudinal intervention study over 6 weeks with 3 groups. One experimental group imagine movements and actions without executing them. A second experimental group performs mirror training, in which visual feedback through a mirror activates additionally the contralateral hemisphere. The control group receives therapy as usual. There are three key domains to be analysed: function (PRWE), impairment (ROM, strength) and participation in social life/life quality (DASH, EQ5D).

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
27
Inclusion Criteria
  • wrist fracture
  • age 65 and older
Exclusion Criteria
  • unstable medical conditions which preclude surgical intervention (ASA 5)
  • Patients who do not live independently (nursing home)
  • Patients with an open fracture
  • Associated soft tissue or skeletal injury to the same limb
  • Cognitive impairment (6CIT < 10)

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Relaxation trainingmotor cognitive therapiesThe control group will receive therapy as usual. Currently, this means that patients are immobilized during first 3-4 weeks. The control group will receive additional relaxation training during this period to achieve the same total amount of time the therapist spends with the patients of the experimental groups.
Mental Practicemotor cognitive therapiesDuring motor imagery practice a person imagines performing a movement with all its sensory consequences without actually moving. In this study the therapists follow a motor imagery guideline designed for rehabilitation of movement performance. The guideline offers therapists structure and a strategy to deliver subject-specific imagery, and is based on principles of motor learning.
Mirror Therapymotor cognitive therapiesMirror therapy is thought to work by using vision of the intact or good arm to replace or drive proprioception in the affected arm, and so normalise the afferent segment of the movement process.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Patient pain and disability12 weeks

Patient Rated Wrist Evaluation (PRWE)

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
objective measurements12 weeks

Range of motion measurements \& grip strength

subjective hand function12 weeks

Disabilities of the Arm and Shoulder (DASH)

subjective well-being12 weeks

EQ5D

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Robert Bosch Medical Center

🇩🇪

Stuttgart, Germany

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