Do Imagined Movements Improve Dexterity in Distal Radius Fractures?
NCT ID: NCT03310151
Last Updated: 2018-05-02
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
4 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2017-10-09
2018-01-01
Brief Summary
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Imagined movements involve imagining the wrist moving, without actually moving the wrist. It has been suggested that immobilisation, for example in plaster, can affect the part of the brain responsible for movement and sensation. It has also been suggested that imagined movement can reduce this impact.
This study is investigating subjects over the age of 50 with relatively low impact trauma. Younger subjects and higher velocity injuries will be excluded as this introduces an unwanted variable. Likewise, any fractures requiring surgery, or subjects with pre-existing upper limb injury or deformity will be excluded.
Patients will be invited to participate following their attendance at the local Accident and Emergency department in Newport, South Wales, or the minor injuries department at Ysbyty Ystrad Fawr Hospital, Ystrad Mynach. Sampling will run for approximately 2 months and all participants will be given standard exercises. All participants will attend an appointment at approximately 1 week and be randomised into treatment or control group. The treatment group will be taught imagined movements and be asked to perform these for 10 minutes, four times a day, the control group will continue with standard exercises.
All subjects will attend again for assessment of dexterity, pain and movement after the plaster has been removed, (4-8 weeks dependent on team). This concludes the study.
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Detailed Description
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The lead researcher will contact each subject within 3 days to discuss the study, and arrange an appointment at 7-10 days to begin the study. This is necessary ethically in order to provide a 'cooling-off' period for the subjects to consider whether they wish to participate. It will also give time for radiology reports to be completed and any subjects with discounted radius fracture can be excluded.
Potential subjects attending the initial appointment at 7-10 days in the outpatient physiotherapy department will be offered the full consent form. Those that do not attend or do not consent will be referred back to Accident and Emergency and return to usual care. Those that consent will be randomised into control or intervention group using a computerised random number generator. The control group will continue with maintenance exercises. Having a control group means that the intervention (imagined movements) can be isolated and tested with greater confidence. This helps to improve the quality of the study and this benefit to the study is believed to outweigh the small risk that having a control group would raise. By having the control group follow usual care as closely as possible further minimises ethical issues and potential risks. All efforts have been made to ensure this but it is recognised that all participants will need to attend two appointments that they would not normally attend on normal care. These are necessary to provide a cooling off period and collect data for the study.
The intervention group will have the same exercises as the control group plus imagined wrist exercises. The exercises will be taught to the subject by reading through the booklet with them, this ensures the advice is standardised. As the intervention is targeting part of the brain involved in the control of movement, high frequency is considered important. The imagined movement programme, is amalgamated from two previous studies and will consist of imagined wrist movement in all planes. The frequency of 15 minutes every waking hour from one study is deemed impractical and another study suggests that 15 minutes of mental practice a day preserved range of motion. Therefore approximately 10-15 minutes, four times a day has been selected as a practical compromise and mirrors routine advice.
An appointment will be arranged as soon as is practically possible, aiming for the same day or day after removal of plaster at approximately 4-8 weeks, (varies between teams). This is to reduce the chance of movement out of plaster affecting the outcome measures.
At the 4-8 week appointment the primary outcome measures of dexterity using the Purdue peg-board, and secondary outcome measures of pain and active wrist range of motion will be measured and recorded in the outpatient physiotherapy department.
The subjects will be randomised into control or intervention group which will reduce selection bias. Only standardised objective outcome measures are being used which reduces the chances of the researcher influencing responses. As this is a small, educational study there is no funding and therefore the researcher will be randomising the participants, providing the exercises, and assessing the outcome measures. It is recognised that this is a potential source of bias as the researcher is not blind to group allocation, however, as this is a pilot study this is felt to be an acceptable weakness and will be recognised in write up. It is also a valuable educational experience for the student researcher to be involved in each part of the study.
Broadly the timetable will be two months of recruitment followed by data collection which will continue for up to eight weeks after recruitment has terminated. Data analysis and interpretation will commence whilst collection is ongoing and continue for approximately two to four weeks. The final reporting and write up will follow this.
Sampling is planned to run for 2 months and all potential subjects meeting the criteria will be given the opportunity to participate. Metrics from the local departments, (after allowing for subjects not consenting or meeting the criteria), suggest this could produce a sample size of around 40. This is difficult to predict but one of the aims of this pilot study is to test these procedures. Recruitment will be initially undertaken by advanced nurse practitioners in Accident and Emergency.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Intervention
Group follows usual care plus imagined movements in a home exercise plan. The exercises will be taught to the subject by reading through an exercise booklet with them, this ensures the advice is standardised. The imagined movement programme will consist of imagined wrist movement in all planes. The frequency of approximately 10-15 minutes, four times a day has been selected as a practical compromise of previous investigations, (Moseley, 2004 and Frenkel et al., 2014), and mirrors routine advice.
Imagined movements
Imagined wrist movements, 10-15 minutes, 4 times a day.
control
Follows usual care
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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Imagined movements
Imagined wrist movements, 10-15 minutes, 4 times a day.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Closed distal radius fracture
* Lives within Aneurin Bevan University Health Board geographically
Exclusion Criteria
* Lives outside Aneurin Bevan University Health Board geographically, or unable to attend appointments
* Open distal radius fracture
* Requires surgery to distal radius fracture
* Fracture is subsequently ruled out
* Any additional upper limb injury
* Bilateral wrist fracture
* Unable to give consent
* Unable to follow instructions or speak English
* Pre-existing wrist injury, deformity or neurological impairment of either upper limb
* Subject describes significant emotional and/or psychological trauma at the time of injury
50 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Aneurin Bevan University Health Board
OTHER
University of Derby
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Thomas Hughes
Clinical Specialist Physiotherapist (MSc student)
Principal Investigators
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Sue Kennedy
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
University of Derby
Locations
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Aneurin Bevan University Health Board
Newport, Gwent, United Kingdom
Countries
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References
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Frenkel MO, Herzig DS, Gebhard F, Mayer J, Becker C, Einsiedel T. Mental practice maintains range of motion despite forearm immobilization: a pilot study in healthy persons. J Rehabil Med. 2014 Mar;46(3):225-32. doi: 10.2340/16501977-1263.
Moseley GL. Graded motor imagery is effective for long-standing complex regional pain syndrome: a randomised controlled trial. Pain. 2004 Mar;108(1-2):192-8. doi: 10.1016/j.pain.2004.01.006.
Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol, Statistical Analysis Plan, and Informed Consent Form
Other Identifiers
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DRF2017
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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