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Effects of Task Oriented Circuit Training on Functional Mobility and Activity Participation in Cerebral Palsy

F

Foundation University Islamabad

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Functional Mobility
Cerebral Palsy (CP)

Treatments

Procedure: CONVENTIONAL PHYSICAL THERAPY
Procedure: Experimental

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07275528
FUI/CTR/2025/10

Details and patient eligibility

About

cerebral palsy hemiplegia often experiences motor problems that primarily affect one side of their body. Children with hemiplegia have difficulties in functional activities. Task-Oriented Circuit Training (TOCT) is a high-intensity, progressive intervention designed to improve functional motor skills by engaging individuals in repetitive, task-specific exercis it is randomized control trail conducted with 34 patients included according to inclusion and exclusion criteria. Functional mobility assessed through 6-minute walk test and activity participation evaluated through Child Engagement in Daily Life measurement scale.

Full description

Cerebral palsy hemiplegia often experiences motor problems that primarily affect one side of their body. Children with hemiplegia have difficulties in functional activities, which severely affects the children's quality of life. Task-Oriented Circuit Training (TOCT) is a progressive intervention designed to improve functional motor skills by engaging individuals in repetitive, task-specific exercises. It involves a series of workstations where individuals practice tasks like balancing, walking, and reaching skills essential for daily life. The purpose of the research was to find out the effectiveness of task specific circuit training on activity participation and functional mobility in children with hemiplegic cerebral palsy. This non blinded randomized control trail will be conducted at fauji foundation hospital Rawalpindi for the duration of 1 year after approval of GERC with 34 patients included according to inclusion and exclusion criteria. After ethical approval from FUSH ERC, eligible participants will be randomly assigned into two groups through sealed envelope method. The participants would assess through 6- minute walk test for functional mobility and child engagement in daily life measurement scale for activity participation on the day of starting the intervention, after 4th week and 8th week. Intervention will be given for a total 40-50 minutes per session, 3 sessions per week for consecutive 8 weeks. Task-oriented Circuit Training (TSCT) includes 14 workstations that target different motor skills through progressive exercises that gradually increase in difficulty. Conventional Physical Therapy includes Stretching of tight muscles, strengthening of weak muscles, and positioning

Enrollment

34 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

5 to 12 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Diagnosed cases of hemiplegic cerebral palsy
  • Both genders are included
  • The children were between 5 and 12 years old.
  • Their motor function was at a level I or II based on the GMFCS,
  • The degree of spasticity grade 1 to 2 based on the Modified Ashworth Scale.

Exclusion criteria

  • Visual or hearing loss
  • Cognitive impairment
  • Seizures
  • A botulinum toxin injection in the previous six months,
  • Lower extremity surgery
  • Musculoskeletal disorders
  • Structural deformities in the spine and/or lower limbs.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

34 participants in 2 patient groups

task oriented circuit training
Experimental group
Description:
Task-oriented circuit training was delivered through a structured set of fourteen workstations designed to promote functional mobility, strength, balance, and coordination. Each workstation targeted a specific task, such as standing and reaching beyond arm's length at various distances and heights, sit-to-stand transitions from different chair heights, multidirectional stepping on blocks of varying heights and surfaces, alternating heel and toe raising, and progressive squatting with adjustments in depth, duration, and added hand weights. Additional stations included supine straight leg raises with optional cuff weights, stair ascending and descending with progressive load, backward walking beginning near a wall and advancing to open space with shuttle runs, walking on a balance beam with speed and surface variations, core-strengthening crunches, supine bridging with increased knee flexion and repetitions, prone opposite arm-and-leg raises with repetition progression, side bridge exer
Treatment:
Procedure: Experimental
Conventional physical therapy
Other group
Description:
convention physical therapy will provide to both the groups comprised stretching exercises, strengthening exercises and positioning. Each spastic muscle will stretch up to the level of mild discomfort where it was held for 20 seconds and the procedure was repeated five times. Each CP child will assess separately for spastic group of muscles. Each weak muscle was made to contract against resistance 10 times in one session. Parents will advise to make their child sit with open legs on bench/block with heels touching the ground. They will also advise to make standing position against a wall with legs in moderate abduction and external rotation for 15 minutes daily after exercises
Treatment:
Procedure: CONVENTIONAL PHYSICAL THERAPY

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Ahyab Mehreen, DPT

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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