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Effect of Adding Progressive Muscle Relaxation to Physical Therapy Program on Fatigue, Mobility and Stress Among Individuals With Traumatic Lower Limb Amputation in the Gaza Strip (PMR-AMP)

M

Marah Radi

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Psychological Stress
Mobility Impairment
Traumatic Lower Limb Amputation
Fatigue

Treatments

Behavioral: Progressive Muscle Relaxation + Standard Physiotherapy
Behavioral: Standard Physiotherapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07139145
PHRC/HC/1251/25

Details and patient eligibility

About

Lower limb amputation is a life-altering condition with profound physical and psychological consequences, including fatigue, impaired mobility, stress, and asymmetrical weight-bearing. These challenges are particularly severe in conflict-affected settings like the Gaza Strip, where access to rehabilitation services is limited.

This study aims to evaluates the effect of adding Progressive Muscle Relaxation (PMR), a simple and cost-effective relaxation technique, to standard physical therapy on Fatigue, mobility, weightbearing distribution and stress outcomes among adults with unilateral traumatic lower limb amputation in Gaza.

Study design:

RCT with 60 participants will be randomly assigned to either (1) a control group receiving standard physiotherapy or (2) an intervention group receiving standard physiotherapy plus PMR.

Outcomes will be measured using validated instruments: Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS), 2-Minute Walk Test (2MWT), Perceived Stress Scale (PSS-10), and dual bathroom scale method for weight-bearing distribution. Assessments will be conducted at baseline, post-intervention (6 weeks), and follow-up (8 weeks).

The study aims to determine whether integrating PMR into rehabilitation improves fatigue reduction, functional mobility, stress management, and weight-bearing symmetry compared to physiotherapy alone. Findings will contribute to evidence-based rehabilitation strategies for amputees in low-resource, high-stress environments.

Full description

This study protocol addresses the multidimensional challenges faced by individuals with traumatic lower limb amputation in the Gaza Strip, a conflict-affected region with limited access to rehabilitation. Amputees often experience persistent fatigue, impaired mobility, asymmetrical weight-bearing, and high psychological distress. Standard physical therapy primarily focuses on physical recovery, while psychosocial rehabilitation is often overlooked.

Rationale:

Progressive Muscle Relaxation (PMR) is a structured mind-body technique that systematically tenses and relaxes muscle groups to reduce stress and physical tension. Evidence from other populations, including patients with cancer, chronic illnesses, and stroke, has shown PMR to be effective in reducing fatigue, anxiety, stress, and improving functional performance. However, its use in amputee rehabilitation-particularly in conflict settings-remains underexplored.

Study Objectives:

General Objective: To evaluate the effect of integrating PMR with physiotherapy program on Fatigue, mobility, weightbearing distribution and stress among individuals with traumatic lower limb amputation.

Study Design:

Randomized controlled trial (RCT) with 60 participants allocated to intervention (PMR + physiotherapy) or control (physiotherapy alone) groups using block randomization and concealed allocation.

Outcome Measures:

Fatigue (FSS), mobility (2MWT), Stress (PSS-10), weight-bearing symmetry (dual scale method).

Assessment Timeline: Baseline (week 0), post-intervention (week 6), and follow-up (week 8).

Sample Size: 60 participants (30 per group), based on power analysis accounting for attrition.

Data Analysis: Descriptive statistics, paired t-tests, independent t-tests, and repeated-measures ANOVA. Intention-to-treat analysis will be applied.

Ethics: Approval is obtained from the Helsinki Committee and the Artificial Limbs and Polio Center (ALPC). Informed consent will be secured, confidentiality maintained, and adverse events monitored.

Expected Impact:

This study will provide the first randomized evidence on the effectiveness of PMR in traumatic amputee rehabilitation within Gaza. It is expected that adding PMR to physiotherapy will significantly reduce fatigue and stress, improve mobility, and enhance weight-bearing symmetry compared to physiotherapy alone. Results will inform rehabilitation protocols in low-resource, conflict-affected settings and may guide future policy and practice for amputee care.

Enrollment

60 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 59 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Adults aged 18 to 59 years.
  • Unilateral traumatic trans-femoral/transtibial amputation.
  • Post prosthetic fitting.

Exclusion criteria

  • Severe comorbidities (e.g., uncontrolled cardiovascular disease).
  • Severe cognitive impairment or mental illness.
  • Recent orthopaedic surgery (<3 months)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

60 participants in 2 patient groups

Experimental - Physiotherapy + Progressive Muscle Relaxation (PMR)
Experimental group
Description:
Participants receive a 6-week standard physiotherapy program combined with Progressive Muscle Relaxation (PMR). Physiotherapy includes warm-up, weight-bearing training, balance training, gait training, and functional activities, delivered twice weekly. PMR sessions last 20 minutes, twice weekly, and involve systematic tensing/relaxing of major muscle groups, diaphragmatic breathing, and visualization techniques adapted for amputees.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Progressive Muscle Relaxation + Standard Physiotherapy
Active Comparator - Standard Physiotherapy Only
Active Comparator group
Description:
Participants receive the same 6-week standard physiotherapy program as the intervention group (warm-up, weight-bearing training, balance training, gait training, and functional activities, twice weekly) but without Progressive Muscle Relaxation.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Standard Physiotherapy

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Marah Nayef Radi, MSc; Mosab Aldabbas, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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