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Cerebral Palsy and Rhizotomy: A ten year follow-up study with Gait Analysis

In 1985, a cohort of 14 children with cerebral palsy underwent a neurosurgical procedure - selective posterior rhizotomy - in an effort to reduce their spasticity. They were part of a prospective study in which their gait was analysed before surgery and at one and three years' post-operatively. In 1...

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Main Author: Subramanian, Nivedita
Other Authors: Vaughan, Christopher Leonard (Kit)
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Human Biology 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Subramanian, Nivedita
author2 Vaughan, Christopher Leonard (Kit)
author_browse Subramanian, Nivedita
Vaughan, Christopher Leonard (Kit)
author_facet Vaughan, Christopher Leonard (Kit)
Subramanian, Nivedita
author_sort Subramanian, Nivedita
collection Thesis
description In 1985, a cohort of 14 children with cerebral palsy underwent a neurosurgical procedure - selective posterior rhizotomy - in an effort to reduce their spasticity. They were part of a prospective study in which their gait was analysed before surgery and at one and three years' post-operatively. In 1995, ten years after surgery, there were important questions that needed to be addressed: would their gait be different from the findings before surgery and three years after surgery and how would they compare with age-matched normal subjects? Three of the original subjects were lost to follow-up and 11 were invited to participate in this long-term study. Their ages ranged from 12 to 24 years at this time of evaluation. Their gait was studied in the sagittal plane by taping retro-reflective markers onto the greater trochanter, lateral femoral epicondyle and lateral malleolus and having the subjects walk in a direction perpendicular to a video camera recording their gait. The data were digitised and analysed making use of custom written software and all relevant gait parameters were calculated. The parameters evaluated were the ranges of motion and midrange values of the knee and thigh, and the spatial-temporal parameters, namely cadence, stride length and velocity. Data were also obtained from twelve age-matched normal control subjects. The ten-year results were compared to the pre-operative data, the data obtained from the three-year study and the normal controls. A statistical analysis was performed on these parameters by using multiple analysis of variance (MANOVA) and post hoc comparisons were performed with a Scheffe test and a significance level set at p < 0.05. Results indicated that after ten years, the joint ranges of motion and mid-range values did not differ significantly from the normal values. The values also did not vary significantly from the values obtained in the three-year follow-up study, suggesting that functional changes acquired due to rhizotomy were of long term duration. The spatial-temporal parameters, however, did differ significantly from the normal range. Although this finding may have been influenced by the environment and subject motivation, the reduced cadence and stride length meant that the cerebral palsy subjects walked slower than their normal counterparts. This project, while confirming the results of the previous subjective studies, provides the first long-term objective data that establishes the effectiveness of selective posterior rhizotomy in improving and maintaining locomotor function for children with spastic cerebral palsy.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
publishDateRange 2017
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publisher Department of Human Biology
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/26365 Cerebral Palsy and Rhizotomy: A ten year follow-up study with Gait Analysis Subramanian, Nivedita Vaughan, Christopher Leonard (Kit) Biomedical Science In 1985, a cohort of 14 children with cerebral palsy underwent a neurosurgical procedure - selective posterior rhizotomy - in an effort to reduce their spasticity. They were part of a prospective study in which their gait was analysed before surgery and at one and three years' post-operatively. In 1995, ten years after surgery, there were important questions that needed to be addressed: would their gait be different from the findings before surgery and three years after surgery and how would they compare with age-matched normal subjects? Three of the original subjects were lost to follow-up and 11 were invited to participate in this long-term study. Their ages ranged from 12 to 24 years at this time of evaluation. Their gait was studied in the sagittal plane by taping retro-reflective markers onto the greater trochanter, lateral femoral epicondyle and lateral malleolus and having the subjects walk in a direction perpendicular to a video camera recording their gait. The data were digitised and analysed making use of custom written software and all relevant gait parameters were calculated. The parameters evaluated were the ranges of motion and midrange values of the knee and thigh, and the spatial-temporal parameters, namely cadence, stride length and velocity. Data were also obtained from twelve age-matched normal control subjects. The ten-year results were compared to the pre-operative data, the data obtained from the three-year study and the normal controls. A statistical analysis was performed on these parameters by using multiple analysis of variance (MANOVA) and post hoc comparisons were performed with a Scheffe test and a significance level set at p < 0.05. Results indicated that after ten years, the joint ranges of motion and mid-range values did not differ significantly from the normal values. The values also did not vary significantly from the values obtained in the three-year follow-up study, suggesting that functional changes acquired due to rhizotomy were of long term duration. The spatial-temporal parameters, however, did differ significantly from the normal range. Although this finding may have been influenced by the environment and subject motivation, the reduced cadence and stride length meant that the cerebral palsy subjects walked slower than their normal counterparts. This project, while confirming the results of the previous subjective studies, provides the first long-term objective data that establishes the effectiveness of selective posterior rhizotomy in improving and maintaining locomotor function for children with spastic cerebral palsy. 2017-11-17T08:03:05Z 2017-11-17T08:03:05Z 1997 2017-04-19T14:28:48Z Master Thesis Masters MSc (Med) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/26365 eng application/pdf Department of Human Biology Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Biomedical Science
Subramanian, Nivedita
Cerebral Palsy and Rhizotomy: A ten year follow-up study with Gait Analysis
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Cerebral Palsy and Rhizotomy: A ten year follow-up study with Gait Analysis
title_full Cerebral Palsy and Rhizotomy: A ten year follow-up study with Gait Analysis
title_fullStr Cerebral Palsy and Rhizotomy: A ten year follow-up study with Gait Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Cerebral Palsy and Rhizotomy: A ten year follow-up study with Gait Analysis
title_short Cerebral Palsy and Rhizotomy: A ten year follow-up study with Gait Analysis
title_sort cerebral palsy and rhizotomy a ten year follow up study with gait analysis
topic Biomedical Science
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/26365
work_keys_str_mv AT subramaniannivedita cerebralpalsyandrhizotomyatenyearfollowupstudywithgaitanalysis