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Intensive Bimanual Therapy Versus Conventional Physical Therapy in Quadriplegic Cerebral Palsy

U

University of Lahore

Status

Completed

Conditions

Quadriplegic Cerebral Palsy
Cerebral Palsy (CP)

Treatments

Behavioral: Intensive Bimanual Therapy plus Conventional Physical Therapy
Behavioral: Conventional Physical Therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07134894
UOL/IREB/25/09/0052

Details and patient eligibility

About

Quadriplegic cerebral palsy (CP) is a severe neurological condition affecting motor control in all four limbs, often resulting in profound functional limitations in daily activities. Impaired upper limb function restricts children's ability to perform essential self-care, educational, and play tasks. Intensive Bimanual Therapy (IBT) is a rehabilitation approach that engages both hands in coordinated, repetitive, and task-specific activities to promote motor learning and functional independence. Conventional Physical Therapy (CPT), while widely used, primarily targets gross motor skills and may not fully address complex bilateral coordination needs.

This randomized controlled trial is designed to compare the effects of IBT and CPT on upper limb function in children with quadriplegic CP. Thirty children aged 2-6 years, classified at Gross Motor Function Classification System (GMFCS) levels III-IV, will be randomly assigned to either CPT alone or a combination of CPT and IBT. The Able Hand Questionnaire (ABL) will be used to measure functional bimanual use before and after an 8-week intervention period. The study aims to determine whether IBT offers additional benefits over standard therapy in enhancing bimanual coordination and functional independence in this population.

Full description

Cerebral palsy is a non-progressive neurodevelopmental disorder caused by early brain injury, with quadriplegic CP representing one of the most severe forms. Children with this condition experience marked impairments in voluntary motor control, coordination, and postural stability. Functional use of the upper limbs is often significantly reduced, which impacts participation in self-care, education, and social activities.

Conventional Physical Therapy (CPT) typically focuses on improving gross motor performance, range of motion, strength, and mobility. While effective for some functional domains, it may not adequately target bilateral coordination, which is critical for everyday tasks. Intensive Bimanual Therapy (IBT) emphasizes the simultaneous use of both hands in structured, progressive, and meaningful activities such as dressing, feeding, and object manipulation. The intervention is based on neuroplasticity principles, incorporating high-repetition, task-specific practice, and active engagement to enhance motor control.

This study will be conducted at the University of Lahore Teaching Hospital. Eligible participants will be children aged 2-6 years with a diagnosis of quadriplegic CP, classified at GMFCS levels III-IV, with sufficient cognitive ability to follow simple instructions. Exclusion criteria include joint contractures limiting bimanual tasks, recent upper limb surgery, botulinum toxin injections within six months, or poor compliance potential.

Participants will be randomly allocated into two groups:

Group A (CPT only): Three 40-minute sessions per week for 8 weeks, including upper limb range of motion exercises, strengthening, balance activities, and functional mobility tasks.

Group B (CPT + IBT): Three 60-minute sessions per week for 8 weeks, combining CPT with 30 minutes of structured bimanual activities. These activities will progress from simple grasping and object transfer tasks to more complex functional activities such as buttoning, puzzle assembly, water pouring, and feeding with utensils. Home-based practice will be encouraged with parental guidance.

The primary outcome measure will be the Able Hand Questionnaire (ABL), which assesses functional use of the hands in daily activities. Assessments will be performed at baseline and after the 8-week intervention by a blinded assessor. Statistical analysis will be performed using non-parametric methods appropriate for the data distribution.

This trial is designed to provide evidence on whether the integration of IBT into standard therapy protocols can optimize functional upper limb outcomes for children with quadriplegic CP, ultimately informing best-practice rehabilitation strategies.

Enrollment

30 patients

Sex

All

Ages

2 to 6 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Children with quadriplegic cerebral palsy.(Te Velde et al., 2021)
  • The target population consisted of children aged 2-6 years (Horwood et al., 2019)
  • Classified as level 3 and 4 in the GMFCS (Sogbossi et al., 2021)
  • Muscle tone grade 2 at modified Ashwarth scale.(Sogbossi et al., 2021)
  • Sufficient cognitive function to follow simple instructions and physically able to engage in sitting and standing exercises. (Chaovalit et al., 2021)

Exclusion criteria

  • Joint contractures that interfere with bimanual tasks.
  • History of upper limb orthopedic surgery
  • Within the last half a year or botulinum toxin injections.
  • Poor compliance with therapy.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

30 participants in 2 patient groups

Intensive Bimanual Therapy plus Conventional Physical Therapy
Experimental group
Description:
Participants in this arm will receive a combination of Intensive Bimanual Therapy (IBT) and Conventional Physical Therapy (CPT) for 8 weeks. Therapy will be delivered three times per week, with two supervised sessions and one home-based session. Each 60-minute session will consist of 30 minutes of CPT-focusing on upper limb range of motion, strengthening, balance, and mobility-and 30 minutes of IBT, incorporating structured bimanual activities such as grasping, object transfer, buttoning, puzzle assembly, water pouring, and feeding with utensils. Activities will progress in complexity every two weeks, with parental guidance provided for home-based practice.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Intensive Bimanual Therapy plus Conventional Physical Therapy
Conventional Physical Therapy Only
Active Comparator group
Description:
Participants in this arm will receive Conventional Physical Therapy (CPT) for 8 weeks, delivered three times per week, with two supervised sessions and one home-based session. Each 40-minute session will include upper limb range of motion exercises, strengthening activities, and gross motor training, incorporating movements such as crawling, assisted stretches, squats, heel raises, step-ups, and knee lifts. Additional activities such as yoga-based poses, animal walks, single-leg stance, and stair climbing will be included to promote flexibility, balance, and functional mobility. The program focuses on general upper and lower limb conditioning without targeted bimanual coordination training.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Conventional Physical Therapy

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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