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Active clinical trials for "Muscle Spasticity"

Results 351-360 of 546

Spastic Cerebral Palsy and Slackline

Spastic Cerebral Palsy

The aim of the present study was to assess whether supervised slackline training improves postural control in children and teenagers with spastic cerebral palsy (grade I and II of the Gross Motor Function Classification System).

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Effects of Dosing and Environment on Gross Motor and Spasticity in Spastic Quadriplegic

Spastic Cerebral Palsy

This study focuses on how enriched environment along with the traditional physical therapy improves the gross motor function in spastic quadriplegic cerebral palsy children. And how much dosing is required to gain that clinically significant improvement.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

The Role of Trans-spinal Direct Current Stimulation (tsDCS) in Treating Patients With Hand Spasticity...

StrokeCerebrovascular Accident (CVA)4 more

The purpose of this study is to evaluate if 5 consecutive sessions of PathMaker anodal DoubleStim treatment, which combines non-invasive stimulation of the spinal cord (tsDCS- trans-spinal direct current stimulation) and of the median nerve at the peripheral wrist (pDCS-- peripheral direct current stimulation), can significantly reduce spasticity of the wrist and hand after stroke.

Completed18 enrollment criteria

Study to Evaluate Effects of DYSPORT® Injected in Lower and Upper Limb Combined With Guided Self-Rehabilitation...

Spastic Hemiparesis

The purpose of this clinical study is to assess whether AbobotulinumtoxinA (Dysport®) injections in upper and lower limbs accompanied with a personal exercise plan called "Guided Self-rehabilitation Contract" (GSC) can improve voluntary movements in subjects with hemiparesis.

Completed23 enrollment criteria

Effect of Raltegravir in Patients With Acute Tropical Spastic Paraparesis - Human T-Lymphotropic...

HTLV-I InfectionsTropical Spastic Paraparesis

This is a pilot study of intervention in a group of patients with tropical spastic paraparesis/ myelopathy to evaluate virologic and clinical response of raltegravir plus zidovudine in this group of patients.

Completed8 enrollment criteria

Botulinum Toxin Type A and Modified Constraint-Induced Movement Therapy for Poststroke Upper Extremity...

Stroke

Botulinum toxin type A (BtxA) injection and modified constraint-induced movement therapy (mCIMT) are both promising approaches to enhance recovery after stroke. However, the combined application of the two modalities has rarely been studied. The aim was to investigate whether combined BtxA and mCIMT would produce greater improvements in spasticity and upper extremity function than BtxA plus conventional rehabilitation in chronic stroke patients with upper extremity spasticity.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Botulinum Toxin Efficiency on Spasticity of Rectus Femoris and Semitendinosus Muscles as Functional...

Cerebral Palsy

The aim of the study is to confirm the functional improvement obtained through treatment of spasticity on 2 agonist and antagonist muscles. The hypothesis is that treatment of both muscles gives a better and longer functional improvement than treatment of only one muscle. The target muscles are the rectus femoris and semitendinosus and the treatment is botulinum toxin. Clinical assessment (passive range of motion of the lower limbs, spasticity level, functional scales and subjective feeling) and gait analysis data (kinematics and kinetics data) are collected. Evaluations take place before treatment, 2 months and 6 months after treatment.

Completed7 enrollment criteria

Energy Costs of Spasticity in Spinal Cord Injury: A Pilot Investigation

Basal Energy ExpenditureSpasticity

The purpose of this study is to determine if there is a relationship between spasticity and relative changes in Basal Energy Expenditure in persons with spinal cord injury.

Terminated7 enrollment criteria

The Movement of Botulinum Toxin Through the Lateral Gastrocnemius Muscle in Humans: An Expanded...

StrokeMuscle Spasticity

Despite the wide-spread use of botulinum toxin (BT) to treat spasticity (increased muscle tone) in central neurological disease, evidence-based guidance on dosing, dilution, and injection technique is limited. The wide-spread use of BT in spasticity management, expense of these agents, and detrimental impact from movement into non-injected muscles mandates a better understanding of BT movement within muscles. A proof-of-concept paper written by investigators at Weill Cornell Medicine introduced a non-invasive MRI approach with "voxel thresholds" that was able to detect intramuscular effects of BT at 2 and 3 months post-injection of BT. The purpose of the current set of studies is to refine this MRI technique to better visualize the movement of botulinum toxin through muscle. In addition, the investigators plan to explore, using the imaging technique, how spastic muscle and differing dilutions affect BT movement in an effort to support the development of better research techniques to study toxin movement in human muscle.

Terminated14 enrollment criteria

Peroral Endoscopic Myotomy Versus Botulinum Toxin Injection in Spastic Esophageal Disorders

Esophageal AchalasiaEsophageal Spasm2 more

To compare the efficacy of peroral endoscopic myotomy and Botulinum toxin injection in spastic esophageal disorders.

Withdrawn21 enrollment criteria
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