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To study the effects of Botulinum toxin type A (BTXA) in the treatment of foot dystonia-associated pain in Parkinson's disease
Full description
Dystonia-associated pain, particularly in the lower limbs is the second most common type of pain in Parkinson's disease (PD). Involuntary muscle contractions that cause slow repetitive movements or abnormal postures are common. The movements may be painful and present in different ways, from just foot inversion or hallux extension to complex forms. They may affect the quality of life of patients in different ways during both ON and OFF periods. Cures for foot dystonia symptoms in PD are not yet available. Yet, improving pain symptoms can improve patients' quality of life. BTXA has been proposed as a safe and useful option for the treatment of PD patients affected by foot dystonia as it could improve symptoms locally without modifying any antiparkinsonian medications. Injected into muscles, BTXA could reduce rigidity, stiffness and improve abnormal postures that may cause foot pain. Recognizing different uses of BTXA will help to understand the symptomatic treatment for each patient in any stage of the disease. The results will help doctors to use new tools to treat foot-dystonia pain in patients with PD.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Subjects with a primary cause of pain in the lower limbs unrelated to PD foot dystonia and associated with another medical condition, e.g. severe arthritis.
Subjects that because of the severity or refractory pain are under an unfixed analgesic schedule.
Subjects who are unable to self- report pain severity in the selected scales. Patients that may require a translator or are illiterate will be included as long as they can self-report pain severity.
Subjects who are undergoing acute infections or other acute intercurrence.
Any contraindication to receiving BTXA injections:
We decided to exclude patients with high risk cardiovascular disease in the case of severe orthostatic hypotension occurring secondary to the BTXA injections (reported in less than 1% of treated cases). Systemic toxic effects of BTXA are rarely reported and most of the cases in the literature are children. In order to absolutely avoid this potential complication, we will exclude patients who report sickness/infections during the study visit
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
40 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
Beatrice Anghelescu; Veronica Bruno, MD, MPH
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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