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Hand skills do not develop in isolation; it is the result of neurologic development, physiologic maturation and adaptation, and functional development of learned patterns of motion and motor learning Hand skills in HCP are very complex and sensitive as it considered the main issue in playing and achieving milestones, so identification of this problem and its solution is very essential and play a miserable rule in adaptive response which is a basis of child's occupation. so, the current study is conducting to investigate the difference between sensory motor integration approach and bobath technique on hand function as manual dexterity, fine motor precision and fine motor integration on children with hemiplegic cerebral palsy
Full description
Sensory integration therapy is the therapeutic mechanism of pediatrics through sensory augmentation which involves the child in enriched playful tasks, promoting a meaningful motor response. The sensory integration theories assume that an affected sensory reception would result in a defect or delay in the development of milestones among children with motor disorders.
The bobath approach provided a new reference aimed to normalize tone and facilitate volitional and automatic movement which tailors based on the patient's individual problems and situational context to manage problems with movement against gravity and postural control Participants will be assigned randomly into two groups of equal number (study group 1 and study group 2 )26 child in each group
Study group "1" will receive regular physical therapy in addition to sensory motor integration for 45 minutes/time ,3 days per week for 3 months Treatment program included two parts: tactile sensation and proprioception stimulation programs. Each of them accounted half of the session
Study group"2" will receive regular physical therapy in addition to bobath therapy for 45 minutes/time 3 days per week for 3 months in the form of:
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Significant mental or psychological problems.
Significant visual/auditory problem.
Botox injection and/or surgery of the affected upper limb in the past 12 months.
Surgical procedures of the affected upper limb.
Fixed deformities in the affected upper limb.
Comorbid physical diseases such as myopathy, neuropathy, and other central and peripheral nervous system disorders.
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Interventional model
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52 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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