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Lower‐extremity selective voluntary motor control in patients with spastic cerebral palsy: increased distal motor impairment
Author(s) -
FOWLER EILEEN G,
STAUDT LORETTA A,
GREENBERG MARCIA B
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
developmental medicine and child neurology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.658
H-Index - 143
eISSN - 1469-8749
pISSN - 0012-1622
DOI - 10.1111/j.1469-8749.2009.03586.x
Subject(s) - ankle , cerebral palsy , medicine , spastic , physical medicine and rehabilitation , gross motor function classification system , physical therapy , spastic diplegia , spasticity , surgery
Aim  Multiple impairments contribute to motor deficits in spastic cerebral palsy (CP). Selective voluntary motor control (SVMC), namely isolation of joint movement upon request, is important, but frequently overlooked. This study evaluated the proximal to distal distribution of SVMC impairment among lower extremity joints. Method  Using a recently developed tool, the Selective Control Assessment of the Lower Extremity (SCALE), we evaluated the SVMC of the hip, knee, ankle, subtalar joint, and toes in a cross‐sectional, observational study of 47 participants with spastic, diplegic, hemiplegic, and quadriplegic CP (22 males, 25 females; mean age 11y 9mo, SD 4y 8mo; Gross Motor Function Classification System levels I–IV). Results  Statistically significant decreases in SCALE scores from hip to toes were found using the Page statistical test for trend ( p <0.001). Statistically significant differences ( p <0.05) were found between all joint pairs, except toes versus subtalar, toes versus ankle, and right ankle versus subtalar joints. Cross‐tabulation of score frequencies for all pairs revealed that proximal joint scores were higher or equal to distal ones 81 to 100% of the time. Excluding toes versus subtalar joints, proximal scores exceeded distal ones 94 to 100% of the time. Interpretation  We confirmed increasing proximal to distal SVMC impairment, which may have implications for treatment and research.

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