Status
Conditions
About
It is the clinical experience of the authors that some children with cerebral palsy who walk in crouch gait show sufficient knee extension during the clinical gait analysis, but walk in considerable knee flexion when they leave the gait laboratory. Possible differences between walking in a gait lab and walking in daily life may be caused by the effect of observational awareness in the lab (also known as the Hawthorne effect), and the lack of dual-tasks (DT) during the analysis (which are common during daily life walking). Since so far there is no technique to reliably measure gait kinematics in children with CP outside of the laboratory, the researchers aim to objectify the influence of both the Hawthorne effect and dual-tasks by introducing different conditions during a standard clinical 3D gait analysis.
Full description
Study design: Observational study
Study population: Patients with cerebral palsy, bilateral spastic, knee flexion gait pattern, GMFCS classification I-III, age 4-16 years.
Objective: To determine the effect of observational awareness (the Hawthorne effect) and dual-tasks on spatiotemporal and kinematic variables during a clinical 3D gait analysis.
Primary research question:
Does reduced observational awareness and/or introduction of a dual-task influence knee flexion in stance phase in children with spastic diplegie cerebral palsy and knee flexion gait?
Secondary research questions:
Conditions in which gait data will be gathered:
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Loading...
Central trial contact
Martin Oude Alink, Msc
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal