Type and Distribution of Gross Motor Activity During Physical Therapy in Young Children With Cerebral Palsy.

IF 3.5 4区 医学 Q1 ORTHOPEDICS
Laura A Prosser, Athylia C Paremski, Julie Skorup, Morgan Alcott, Samuel R Pierce
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Abstract

Objective: Physical therapists routinely deliver and prescribe motor practice to improve function. The ability to select optimal practice regimens is limited by a current lack of detail in the measurement of motor practice. The objective of this study was to quantify the type, amount, and timing of gross motor practice during physical therapist sessions.

Methods: A secondary video coding analysis of physical therapist sessions from the iMOVE clinical trial (NCT02340026) in young children with cerebral palsy (CP) was conducted. The 37 children who completed the treatment phase were included (mean age = 22.1 months). Children could initiate pulling to stand but were unable to walk. Videos of randomly selected therapy sessions were coded for gross motor activity (422 videos total). The 10 gross motor activity codes included lying, sitting, four point, crawling, kneeling, knee walking, standing, walking, transitions between floor postures, and transitions to/from an upright posture. Twenty percent of each video was double coded for reliability. Time per session, number of bouts, and median time per bout were calculated for each gross motor activity and for 2 aggregate measures: movement time and upright time.

Results: Participants spent more than half of therapy time in sitting and standing combined (60.3%). Transitions occurred more frequently than any other motor activity (49.3 total transitions per session). Movement time accounted for 16.3% of therapy time. Upright time accounted for 53.3% of therapy time.

Conclusions: Critical practice time to gain motor skill is not equivalent to chronological time or time spent in therapy. Toddlers with CP spent a small amount of therapy time moving. Future work should explore the relations between motor practice and rehabilitation outcomes.

Impact: Physical therapists are ideally suited to detail the content of motor practice and ultimately to prescribe optimal patterns of motor practice. We report the characteristics of gross motor practice during therapy in children with CP.

脑瘫幼儿物理治疗期间粗大运动活动的类型和分布。
目的:物理治疗师经常提供和规定运动练习,以改善功能。由于目前缺乏对运动练习的详细测量,选择最佳练习方案的能力受到了限制。本研究旨在量化物理治疗师治疗过程中粗大运动练习的类型、数量和时间:对iMOVE临床试验(NCT02340026)中物理治疗师对脑瘫(CP)幼儿的治疗过程进行了二次视频编码分析。37名完成治疗阶段的儿童被纳入其中(平均年龄=22.1个月)。患儿可以主动牵拉站立,但无法行走。对随机抽取的治疗过程视频进行了粗大运动活动编码(共 422 个视频)。10 个粗大运动活动代码包括躺、坐、四点、爬、跪、膝行、站、走、地面姿势之间的转换以及从直立姿势到直立姿势之间的转换。为确保可靠性,每段视频中的 20% 都进行了双重编码。针对每项粗大运动活动以及运动时间和直立时间这两项综合指标,计算了每次治疗的时间、治疗次数和每次治疗的中位时间:结果:参与者的坐姿和站姿时间加起来超过治疗时间的一半(60.3%)。转换动作的频率高于其他任何运动活动(每次治疗共转换 49.3 次)。运动时间占治疗时间的 16.3%。直立时间占治疗时间的 53.3%:结论:获得运动技能的关键练习时间并不等同于计时时间或治疗时间。患有先天性脑瘫的学步儿童花费在运动上的治疗时间较少。未来的工作应探索运动练习与康复效果之间的关系:影响:物理治疗师非常适合详细说明运动练习的内容,并最终规定最佳的运动练习模式。我们报告了CP患儿治疗期间大运动练习的特点。
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来源期刊
Physical Therapy
Physical Therapy Multiple-
CiteScore
7.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
187
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Physical Therapy (PTJ) engages and inspires an international readership on topics related to physical therapy. As the leading international journal for research in physical therapy and related fields, PTJ publishes innovative and highly relevant content for both clinicians and scientists and uses a variety of interactive approaches to communicate that content, with the expressed purpose of improving patient care. PTJ"s circulation in 2008 is more than 72,000. Its 2007 impact factor was 2.152. The mean time from submission to first decision is 58 days. Time from acceptance to publication online is less than or equal to 3 months and from acceptance to publication in print is less than or equal to 5 months.
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