Generalised versus targeted physiotherapy in childhood hypermobility
- Conditions
- Symptomatic hypermobilityMusculoskeletal DiseasesOther systemic involvement of connective tissue
- Registration Number
- ISRCTN58523390
- Lead Sponsor
- Royal Liverpool Children's NHS Trust (UK)
- Brief Summary
Not available
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- Completed
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 108
1. Children aged 7 to 16 years, either sex
2. Treated at the Department of Rheumatology, Royal Liverpool Children's NHS Trust, Liverpool, UK between June 2004 and May 2007
3. Identified as having symptomatic hypermobility*
4. Symptomatic patients had arthralgia for three preceding months or more
*Children were hypermobile if they met Revised Criteria for benign joint hypermobility syndrome (BJHS). In brief, they had to fulfil either two major criteria, one major and two minor criteria, four minor criteria, or two minor criteria and a first degree relative with hypermobility.
Major criteria were:
1. Beighton score of greater than 4
2. Arthralgia in greater than 4 joints
Minor criteria included:
1. Beighton score less than 4
2. Arthralgia in less than 4 joints
3. Mechanical back pain for greater than 3 months
4. Hypermobility in first degree relative
Beighton score assesses hypermobility of the following: placing hands flat on floor without bending knees, hyperextension of knees and elbows greater than 100, little finger metacarpalphalangeal hyperextension to greater than 900, bending thumb to forearm.
Patients were excluded if they refused consent.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- Interventional
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Improvement in the child's pain assessment score. Younger children used a faces scale ranging from 1 to 5 while older children (age greater than 11 years) used a Visual Analogue Scale (VAS). Participants were asked to indicate on the linear 100 mm scale their pain level in the past week. Change in pain-VAS was used to assess the impact of therapy on symptoms. Measured at baseline (pre-treatment), midpoint (following 6-week intervention) and follow up (3 months after midpoint).
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method 1. Parent's assessment of their child's pain: parental-VAS <br>2. Parent's global evaluation of the impact of their child's hypermobility in the previous week: global-VAS<br>3. Functional impairment measured using the Childhood Health Assessment Questionnaire (CHAQ)<br>4. Six-minute shuttle test (measured at baseline and midpoint only)<br><br>Measured at baseline (pre-treatment), midpoint (following 6 week intervention) and follow up (3 months after midpoint).