Boxum, I. (Ilona) (2013) The development of postural control in infants at high risk for cerebral palsy. thesis, Medicine.
Text
BoxumA.pdf Restricted to Registered users only Download (871kB) |
Abstract
Introduction: Cerebral palsy (CP) is a heterogeneous group of disorders characterized by impaired motor function and postural deficits caused by non-progressive damage of the developing brain. Postural control is organized in two levels. The first level consists of direction-specificity, e.g. primarily recruiting dorsal muscles during forward bodysway. The second level deals with fine-tuning of direction-specific adjustments. At school-age, most children with CP have problems adapting the direction-specific adjustment to specific tasks. This study explores the development of postural control in infants at high risk (HR) for CP. Methods: In this longitudinal study, surface electromyograms (EMGs) of 10 HR-infants were recorded in supine and sitting position during reaching in early infancy (4-8 months corrected age) and late infancy (10-14 months corrected age). Sessions were recorded on video. EMG-signals of neck-, trunk-, leg- and arm muscles were analyzed with the PedEMG program. Similar video and EMG-data of 11 typically developing (TD) infants were available at 4, 6 and 10 months. Mann-Whitney and Wilcoxon tests were used in data-analyses; p<0.05 was considered statistically significant. Results: Generally, the prevalence of direction-specific adjustments did not differ between HR and TD-infants; it varied between 17-81% at various ages, body-levels, both positions and groups. However, two exceptions were present in supine: young HR infants showed more direction-specific postural adjustments at trunk level than 6-month-old TD-infants (median values 63% vs. 51% Mann-Whitney: p=0.034), and at neck level compared to 4-month-old TD-infants (median values 50% vs. 42%; Mann-Whitney: p=0.037). Findings at the second level of postural control were similar in HR and TD-infants. Limited data in sitting was available in HR-infants due to their postural problems in this position. Conclusion: This explorative study suggests that the development of the first and second level of postural control in HR-infants is characterized by variation and does not differ from TD-infants. Presumably this is true for the posturally non-challenging situation of supine position. The data in sitting were however too limited to draw similar conclusions for this situation. Further research with larger numbers HR-infants in sitting is required to improve understanding of postural impairments as this may lead to the development of optimal intervention programs.
Item Type: | Thesis (Thesis) |
---|---|
Supervisor name: | Supervisor: and Hadders-Algra, Prof. Dr. M. Developmen |
Faculty: | Medical Sciences |
Date Deposited: | 25 Jun 2020 10:57 |
Last Modified: | 25 Jun 2020 10:57 |
URI: | https://umcg.studenttheses.ub.rug.nl/id/eprint/1746 |
Actions (login required)
View Item |