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Upper Extremity Function Before and After Hippotherapy in Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder and/or Cerebral Palsy

The Ohio State University logo

The Ohio State University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Autism Spectrum Disorder
Cerebral Palsy

Treatments

Behavioral: Hippotherapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06530680
2020B0434

Details and patient eligibility

About

The goal of this feasibility trial is to learn if hippotherapy and physical therapy in the equine environment can be used to improve upper extremity function in children with cerebral palsy or autism spectrum disorder who present with motor delay or impairment in the upper extremities. The main questions it aims to answer are:

Can the upper extremity-focused treatment using hippotherapy and the equine environment be delivered to fidelity?

Is the treatment acceptable to participants and therapists?

Is the randomized-controlled trial protocol feasible to scale to a larger study, including recruitment and retention rates and suitability of selected outcome measures?

If there is a comparison group: Researchers will compare participants receiving treatment to a waitlist control to see if participants are retained in the control group and if differences are detected between the control and treatment groups on selected outcome measures.

Full description

Intervention. Participants will receive 4 weeks of hippotherapy, 4 × 1-hour sessions per week, for a total of 16 hours of intervention. If the participants miss a session, make-up sessions will be offered, scheduled, and tracked.51

Hippotherapy: The hippotherapy intervention will be delivered at Dreams on Horseback in central Ohio using Professional Association of Therapeutic Horsemanship (PATH) Intl. standards. Participants will be mounted on a horse for at least 30 minutes of the 1-hour session. Activities for the remaining time include grooming and tacking of the horses, mounting, and dismounting. A herd of 9 horses will be used for hippotherapy sessions. There will be 2 volunteers assisting with every session: one to lead the horse, and one to walk alongside the participant opposite the treating therapist. Dreams on Horseback has a part-time Volunteer Coordinator who currently schedules 154 volunteers for 22 hours of equine-assisted activities per week (Monday - Saturday). Activities will include various positions on the horse such as sitting and quadruped (weight bearing through the upper extremities and knees), as well as reaching and throwing, controlling the horse with the reins, and riding the horse at a walk and a trot as is suggested by PATH Intl. Standards. Using the observation protocol in the preliminary data section, one researcher will video record one hippotherapy session each week and document the therapeutic activities performed. A second researcher will score 20% of the sessions to assure reliability of >90%. Categories expected based on preliminary data are transitions, ground poles, directional changes, reaches outside of base of support, reaches, weight bearing through upper extremities, using reins, holding upper extremities off of the horse, position on the horse (with or without stirrups, standing, sitting, posting), and kicking/squeezing the horse with legs. This analysis will allow the investigators to quantify the dose of hippotherapy, focus on the impact of therapeutic targets to the upper extremities, and allow the investigators to evaluate adherence to the hippotherapy protocol.

Treating Therapists: All treating therapists will be licensed PTs and will have completed at least the AHA Level I Hippotherapy Treatment Principles.

Since the goal of pilot studies is not to test efficacy, no inferential statistics are proposed. The investigators will analyze questions pertaining to 1) the recruitment success of children with CP+ASD ages 5-15; 2) whether participants adhere to what they are asked to do during the pilot RCT; and 3) if the treatment can be successfully delivered per protocol. The investigators will describe the number of potential participants screened per month; the number enrolled per month; the average time delay from screening to enrollment; and the average time to enroll enough participants for 2 groups. Treatment-specific retention and attrition rates for hippotherapy, including the reasons for dropouts, and treatment-specific fidelity rates, including a measure of dose of hippotherapy and upper extremity activities, will be described.

Enrollment

12 patients

Sex

All

Ages

6 to 17 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Children age 6 to 17
  • Diagnosis of Cerebral Palsy with Gross Motor Functional Classification System (GMFCS) Level I, II, or III with upper extremity affected Cerebral Palsy and/or Autism Spectrum Disorder
  • Able to follow simple verbal instructions in English
  • Able to tolerate sitting on a horse continuously for 30 minutes

Exclusion criteria

  • Fear of or aversion to horses
  • Weight over 200 lb
  • Lacking independent head control (GMFCS level IV and V)
  • Both parents unable to speak and read English

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

12 participants in 2 patient groups

Physical therapy incorporating hippotherapy and the equine environment
Experimental group
Description:
Four 1 hour Hippotherapy treatments per week for four weeks.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Hippotherapy
Waitlist Control
No Intervention group
Description:
A waitlist control that will receive hippotherapy intervention (four 1 hour Hippotherapy treatments per week for four weeks.) Four weeks later than the 'Physical therapy incorporating hippotherapy and the equine environment' Group.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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