Effects of Motor Cognitive Training on Functional Loss After Osteoporotic Wrist Fractures (PROFinD-TP4)
Osteoporotic Distal Radius Fracture
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Osteoporotic Distal Radius Fracture focused on measuring osteoporosis, wrist fracture, mental practice, mirror therapy, immobilization, elderly
Eligibility Criteria
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)
Sites / Locations
- Robert Bosch Medical Center
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Arm 3
Experimental
Experimental
Active Comparator
Mental Practice
Mirror Therapy
Relaxation training
During 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 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.
The 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.