Visceral Mobilization and Functional Constipation in Stroke Survivors
Stroke Rehabilitation
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Stroke Rehabilitation
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Male and female patients aged 40 to 70 years having suffered a stroke more than one year earlier with hemiparesis secondary to a single unilateral event
- The capacity for independent gait and a complaint of chronic constipation for more than six months in accordance with the definition of functional constipation described by the Rome III Consensus
Exclusion Criteria:
- Incision or tumor in the abdominal region
- fractures
- rheumatic disease
- infectious process in the acute phase
- inability to understand the proposed evaluations
- inability to walk or maintain balance in an independent manner
Sites / Locations
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Sham Comparator
visceral mobilization
sham mobilization
Conventional physical therapy and visceral mobilization. The experimental group was also submitted to mobilization of the ascending colon, descending colon, sigmoid colon and sphincters (cardiac, pyloric, Oddi, duodenojejunal and ileocecal) with the patient in the supine position, knees flexed, feet supported and abdomen exposed. Contact was made with the region to be treated, leading it in the direction of immobility, with pressure maintained for one minute on each region with intensity based on the sensitivity to tension observed on the feedback of the individual.
Conventional physical therapy and sham mobilization. In the control group, sham mobilization was performed, which consisted of superficial contact with no pressure on the abdominal region corresponding to the loops of the large intestine.