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ABSTRACT: The evaluation of complex interventions, such as Single Event Multilevel Surgery (SEMLS) requires more than randomized controlled trials. Rehabilitation following SEMLS is prolonged and the outcomes of interest may not be apparent for 5 years or more after the surgery. We suggest long term, prospective cohort studies with objective outcome measures be recognized as of equal importance to randomized controlled trials. The evidence in support of instrumented gait analysis (IGA) is also reviewed. We suggest that clinical levels of evidence are not an appropriate method to evaluate a measurement tool. Specifically, IGA should be evaluated in terms of validity, reliability and cost effectiveness. We demonstrate that the use of IGA has improved medium and long term outcomes in ambulant children with cerebral palsy in a center where IGA has been used routinely both for planning SEMLS and for monitoring outcomes.
Journal of pediatric orthopedics 09/2012; 32 Suppl 2:S182-6. · 1.23 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: Single Event Multilevel Surgery (SEMLS) is considered the standard of care to improve gait and function in children with bilateral spastic cerebral palsy (BSCP). We have demonstrated in a randomized controlled trial (RCT) of SEMLS, that gait was improved at 12 months after surgery and gross motor function at 24 months after surgery. The question addressed in this study, was to determine if improvements in gait and function, would be maintained at 5 year follow-up. METHODS: Nineteen children with BSCP, GMFCS levels II (14 children) and III (5 children), mean age 9.7 years (range 7.7-12.2 years) participated in a prospective cohort study following participation in a RCT, with follow-up to 5 years. Outcome measures were Gait Profile Score (GPS), Gillette Gait Index (GGI), Gait Deviation Index (GDI), Gross Motor Function Measure (GMFM66) and Functional Mobility Scale (FMS). RESULTS: Eighteen children have completed follow-up, with interval analysis at 1, 2 and 5 years post SEMLS. One child was excluded because of neurological deterioration and his diagnosis was revised to Hereditary Spastic Paraparesis (HSP). GPS improved by 5.29° and GMFM66 by 3.3% at 5 years post SEMLS. Differences between outcome measures at 1 versus 5 years and 2 versus 5 years (except GMFM66) were not significant, indicating that improvements in gait and gross motor function were stable over time. CONCLUSIONS: SEMLS results in clinically and statistically significant improvements in gait and function, in children with BSCP, which were maintained at 5 years after surgery.
Gait & posture 07/2012; · 2.58 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the relationship between walking ability, as determined with use of the Gross Motor Function Classification System (GMFCS), and the outcome of hip adductor surgery used to prevent hip displacement in children with cerebral palsy.
We performed a retrospective review of the records of all children with cerebral palsy whose index surgery, performed between January 1994 and December 2004 at one tertiary-level pediatric hospital, was bilateral hip adductor releases. All children had a hip migration percentage of >30% in at least one hip prior to the adductor surgery, and the minimum duration of follow-up was twenty-four months. Kaplan-Meier survivorship curves were generated by determining the time from the index surgery to "failure," defined as either the need for subsequent surgical procedures or a migration percentage of ≥50% in either hip. Hazard ratios were calculated for sex, migration percentage at the time of the index surgery, age at the time of the index surgery, and GMFCS level.
Three hundred and thirty children were included in the study; 73% (242) were nonambulatory (GMFCS level IV or V). The mean age at the time of the index surgery was 4.2 years, the mean migration percentage was 43%, and the mean duration of postoperative follow-up was 7.1 years. Surgery consisted of open lengthening of the adductor longus and gracilis muscles in all children, with additional procedures as deemed necessary. "Success" was defined as the absence of subsequent surgical procedures during the study period and a migration percentage of <50% in both hips at the time of follow-up. One hundred and six children (32%) met these criteria for success. The success rate was 94% (thirty-one of thirty-three) in children at a GMFCS level of II, 49% (twenty-seven of fifty-five) in children at a level of III, 27% (twenty-eight of 103) in children at a level of IV, and 14% (twenty of 139) in children at a level of V.
Walking ability, as defined with use of the GMFCS level, is a strong predictor of success or failure after hip adductor surgery in children with cerebral palsy. The paradox of hip adductor surgery for children with cerebral palsy is that the children who are most severely affected and need the surgery the most have the poorest results.
The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery 02/2012; 94(4):326-34. · 3.27 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Single-event multilevel surgery is considered the standard of care to improve gait and functioning of children with spastic diplegic cerebral palsy. However, the evidence base is limited. This pilot study is the first randomized controlled trial of single-event multilevel surgery, to our knowledge.
Nineteen children (twelve boys and seven girls with a mean age of nine years and eight months) with spastic diplegia were enrolled. Eleven children were randomized to the surgical group and eight, to the control group. The control group underwent a program of progressive resistance strength training. The randomized phase of the trial concluded at twelve months. The control group then exited the study and progressed to surgery, whereas the surgical group continued to be followed in a prospective cohort study. The primary outcome measures were the Gait Profile Score (GPS) and the Gillette Gait Index (GGI). Secondary outcome measures were gross motor function (Gross Motor Function Measure-66 [GMFM-66]), functional mobility (Functional Mobility Scale [FMS]), time spent in the upright position, and health-related quality of life (Child Health Questionnaire [CHQ]).
A total of eighty-five surgical procedures were performed, with a mean of eight procedures per child (standard deviation, four). The surgical group had a 34% improvement in the GPS and a 57% improvement in the GGI at twelve months. The control group had a small nonsignificant deterioration in both indices. The between-group differences for the change in the GPS (-5.5; 95% confidence interval, -7.6 to -3.4) and the GGI (-218; 95% confidence interval, -299 to -136) were highly significant. The differences between the groups with regard to the secondary outcome measures were not significant at twelve months. At twenty-four months after surgery, there was a 4.9% increase in the GMFM-66 score and improvements in the FMS score, time spent in the upright position, and the physical functioning domain of the CHQ in the surgical group.
This study provides Level-II evidence that single-event multilevel surgery improves the gait of children with spastic diplegic cerebral palsy twelve months after surgery. Improvements in other domains, including gross motor function and quality of life, were not observed until twenty-four months after surgery.
The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery 03/2011; 93(5):451-60. · 3.27 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: This article discusses the sagittal gait patterns in children with spastic diplegia, with an emphasis on the knee, as well as the concept of the "dose" of surgery that is required to correct different gait pathologies. The authors list the various interventions in the order of their increasing dose. The concept of dose is useful in the consideration of the management of knee dysfunction.
Orthopedic Clinics of North America 10/2010; 41(4):561-77. · 1.25 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: In population-based studies, hip displacement affects approximately one-third of children with cerebral palsy (CP). Given the extreme range of clinical phenotypes in the CP spectrum, it is unsurprising that hip development varies from normality, to dislocation and degenerative arthritis. Numerous radiological indices are available to measure hip displacement in children with CP; however, there is no grading system for assessing hip status in broad categorical terms. This makes it difficult to audit the incidence of hip displacement, determine the relationship between hip displacement and CP subtypes, assess the outcome of intervention studies, and to communicate hip status between health care professionals. We developed a categorical, radiographic classification of hip morphology based on qualitative indices and measurement of the key continuous variable, the migration percentage of Reimers. One hundred and thirty-four radiographs were reviewed of 52 female and 82 male adolescents with CP who were at, or close to, skeletal maturity (mean age 16y 1mo [SD 1y 4mo] range 14y to 19y 1mo). Twenty-nine were classified at Gross Motor Function Classification System level I, 25 at level II, 27 at level III, 24 at level IV, and 29 at level V. A classification system was developed to encapsulate the full spectrum of hip morphology in CP, with and without intervention.
Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology 01/2009; 51(3):183-92. · 2.92 Impact Factor
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Journal of Children s Orthopaedics 09/2008; 2(4):321-2.
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ABSTRACT: Systemic effects from Botulinum neurotoxin A are uncommon but can have serious consequences. We report the case of a boy with severe cerebral palsy who developed deterioration in respiratory and oromotor function following repeated injections of Botulinum neurotoxin A. Caution is needed in using this treatment in children with severe cerebral palsy and pseudobulbar palsy.
Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health 07/2007; 43(6):499-501. · 1.28 Impact Factor
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Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics B 08/2005; 14(4):307-8; author reply 308-9. · 0.47 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Most clinicians who perform botulinum toxin A injections for children with cerebral palsy do so using the "free-hand" or manual technique without using radiologic or electrophysiologic guidance to aid needle placement. The objective of this study was to investigate the accuracy of manual needle placement compared with needle placement guided by electrical stimulation. A total of 1,372 separate injections for upper and lower limb spasticity were evaluated in 226 children with cerebral palsy. The accuracy of manual needle placement compared with electrical stimulation was acceptable only for gastroc-soleus (>75%); it was unacceptable for the hip adductors (67%), medial hamstrings (46%), tibialis posterior (11%), biceps brachii (62%), and forearm and hand muscles (13% to 35%). The authors recommend using electrical stimulation or other guidance techniques to aid accurate needle placement in all muscles except the gastroc-soleus. Further study is needed to determine whether more accurate injecting will lead to better functional outcomes and more efficient use of botulinum toxin A.
Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics 25(3):286-91. · 1.16 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The authors prospectively studied three-dimensional kinematics and kinetics of gait in children recovering from a closed, isolated, nonpathologic fracture of the femoral diaphysis, who had been randomly assigned to management by monolateral external fixation or early hip spica casting. The aims were to investigate the gait patterns soon after injury and at 2 years after injury. Children treated with external fixation, walking with the external fixator in situ, demonstrated asymmetric gait abnormalities in all three anatomic planes affecting the trunk, pelvis, hip, knee, and ankle. This appears to be a strategy to minimize movement and pain at the fixator pin sites. The gait pattern normalized rapidly after removal of the external fixator with few kinematic or kinetic abnormalities and no clinically significant disturbances of gait at 2 years after injury. In contrast, children in the early hip spica cast group developed a "crouch gait" pattern in the sagittal plane, most likely due to weakness. They also had abnormal coronal plane kinematics related to shortening of the injured side. Gait patterns improved, but at 2 years there were some persistent gait deviations, probably related to residual limb length discrepancy.
Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics 24(5):463-71. · 1.16 Impact Factor