Effects of Forward Tilting of Seat Surface on Arm-hand Mobility of Young Children with Bilateral Spastic Cerebral Palsy: a Preliminary Study

This preliminary study is on the effect of forward-tilting of the seat-surface on arm-hand function of young children with cerebral palsy (CP). Five children were recruited (two females, three males; median age 2 years 7 months). Inclusion criteria: preschool age, bilateral spastic CP with truncal h...

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Main Author: Mattana Angsupaisal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Rajanagarindra Institute of Child Development 2017-07-01
Series:International Journal of Child Development and Mental Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/cdmh/article/view/94762
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spelling doaj-ebaf070df93b4b5a981c851a88abd3352020-11-25T00:25:27ZengRajanagarindra Institute of Child DevelopmentInternational Journal of Child Development and Mental Health2286-74812586-887X2017-07-0152112194762Effects of Forward Tilting of Seat Surface on Arm-hand Mobility of Young Children with Bilateral Spastic Cerebral Palsy: a Preliminary StudyMattana Angsupaisal0Assistant Professor and pediatric physical therapist at Department of Physical Therapy, Faculty of Allied Health Sciences, Naresuan University, Pitsanuloke, ThailandThis preliminary study is on the effect of forward-tilting of the seat-surface on arm-hand function of young children with cerebral palsy (CP). Five children were recruited (two females, three males; median age 2 years 7 months). Inclusion criteria: preschool age, bilateral spastic CP with truncal hypotonia, Gross Motor Function Classification System levels II-IV. Participants served as their own controls. Adaptive seating with three wedge-inserts inducing 10, 20 or 30 degrees forward-tilt of the seat-surface was used. The tilt which induced best postural stability and alignment was applied. Arm mobility was assessed three times with one week intervals. Arm-hand function was assessed using the upper limb physicians rating scale (ULPRS) in the horizontal condition (H), and forward tilt condition (FW), 10 minutes per condition in random order. Two children were tested with 10-degree FW tilted seating, three children with 20 degrees. Mean ULPRS scores were higher in FW [dominant arm: 19.73 (1.94), non-dominant arm: 16.53 (2.21)] than in H condition [dominant arm: 17.93 (1.92), non-dominant arm: 13.73 (2.52)]. ANOVA demonstrated an effect of condition (dominant arm: p=0.001, non-dominant arm: p=0.009), but not of the testing session (dominant arm: p=0.970, non-dominant arm: p=0.724). Therefore, forward-tilting of the seat-surface may enhance arm-hand function in preschool children with Bi-CP.https://www.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/cdmh/article/view/94762Cerebral palsyAdaptive seatingForward-tilting seatArm-hand mobility
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mattana Angsupaisal
spellingShingle Mattana Angsupaisal
Effects of Forward Tilting of Seat Surface on Arm-hand Mobility of Young Children with Bilateral Spastic Cerebral Palsy: a Preliminary Study
International Journal of Child Development and Mental Health
Cerebral palsy
Adaptive seating
Forward-tilting seat
Arm-hand mobility
author_facet Mattana Angsupaisal
author_sort Mattana Angsupaisal
title Effects of Forward Tilting of Seat Surface on Arm-hand Mobility of Young Children with Bilateral Spastic Cerebral Palsy: a Preliminary Study
title_short Effects of Forward Tilting of Seat Surface on Arm-hand Mobility of Young Children with Bilateral Spastic Cerebral Palsy: a Preliminary Study
title_full Effects of Forward Tilting of Seat Surface on Arm-hand Mobility of Young Children with Bilateral Spastic Cerebral Palsy: a Preliminary Study
title_fullStr Effects of Forward Tilting of Seat Surface on Arm-hand Mobility of Young Children with Bilateral Spastic Cerebral Palsy: a Preliminary Study
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Forward Tilting of Seat Surface on Arm-hand Mobility of Young Children with Bilateral Spastic Cerebral Palsy: a Preliminary Study
title_sort effects of forward tilting of seat surface on arm-hand mobility of young children with bilateral spastic cerebral palsy: a preliminary study
publisher Rajanagarindra Institute of Child Development
series International Journal of Child Development and Mental Health
issn 2286-7481
2586-887X
publishDate 2017-07-01
description This preliminary study is on the effect of forward-tilting of the seat-surface on arm-hand function of young children with cerebral palsy (CP). Five children were recruited (two females, three males; median age 2 years 7 months). Inclusion criteria: preschool age, bilateral spastic CP with truncal hypotonia, Gross Motor Function Classification System levels II-IV. Participants served as their own controls. Adaptive seating with three wedge-inserts inducing 10, 20 or 30 degrees forward-tilt of the seat-surface was used. The tilt which induced best postural stability and alignment was applied. Arm mobility was assessed three times with one week intervals. Arm-hand function was assessed using the upper limb physicians rating scale (ULPRS) in the horizontal condition (H), and forward tilt condition (FW), 10 minutes per condition in random order. Two children were tested with 10-degree FW tilted seating, three children with 20 degrees. Mean ULPRS scores were higher in FW [dominant arm: 19.73 (1.94), non-dominant arm: 16.53 (2.21)] than in H condition [dominant arm: 17.93 (1.92), non-dominant arm: 13.73 (2.52)]. ANOVA demonstrated an effect of condition (dominant arm: p=0.001, non-dominant arm: p=0.009), but not of the testing session (dominant arm: p=0.970, non-dominant arm: p=0.724). Therefore, forward-tilting of the seat-surface may enhance arm-hand function in preschool children with Bi-CP.
topic Cerebral palsy
Adaptive seating
Forward-tilting seat
Arm-hand mobility
url https://www.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/cdmh/article/view/94762
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