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Physical Activity on Postural Stability and Coordination in Children With Posterior Fossa Tumor

Impact of Physical Activity on Postural Stability and Coordination in Children With Posterior Fossa Tumor

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04528316
Enrollment
60
Registered
2020-08-27
Start date
2020-08-06
Completion date
2021-04-30
Last updated
2021-08-04

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Posterior Fossa Tumor, Medulloblastoma, Childhood

Keywords

physical activity, postural stability, coordination, posterior fossa tumor

Brief summary

Medulloblastoma is a rapidly-growing tumor of the cerebellum, this area controls balance, posture and sophisticated motor functions like finer hand movements, speech, and swallowing. It has been reported that those children fall frequently so the purpose of this study is to investigate the effectiveness of balance and coordination training in these Children.

Detailed description

The effects of physical exercise training interventions for childhood cancer participants are not yet convincing due to small numbers of participants and insufficient study methodology. More and high-quality evidence is needed in order to be able to draft exercise and physical activity guidelines for this population. Despite the positive results of exercise interventions in adult cancer patients, the evidence for benefits in childhood cancer patients is limited. There are Two Main objectives: 1. To investigate the effectiveness of Pilates core stability exercises program. 2. To investigate the effectiveness of Humac balance and tilt system. Secondary Objectives: 1. The effectiveness of coordination training in children with posterior fossa tumors. 2. The comparison between balance and coordination training and which of both trainings has more effect. This study will take place in a pediatric oncology setting, Children's Cancer Hospital Egypt(CCHE), in outpatient setting. Patients will be evaluated for their balance and coordination at initial presentation, during treatment, and during follow-up after end of treatment at CCHE. Also patients will receive balance and coordination training, before each chemotherapy cycle-maximum one week- given the patient is in good state. Sixty children with posterior fossa tumors of both sexes will participate in this study. They will be selected from CCHE. They will be randomly assigned into 3 groups of equal number.

Interventions

BEHAVIORALPilates Core Stability Exercises program

Twenty patients will receive Pilates core stability exercises program ONLY. Total Period: 12 Weeks Stages: Three stages: * Stage I: Warm-up: consists of four Pilates motions: 1. Breathing: 2. Rolling back: 3. Coccyx-curl: 4. Hundred breathing: * Stage II: Work-out: consists of twelve Pilates motions: 1. Single leg stretch: 2. Straight leg raise: 3. Basic bridge: 4. Bridging variation: 5. Quadruped: 6. Clap with seal motion 7. Mermaid twist: 8. Swimming: 9. Double leg stretch: 10. Shoulder bridge: 11. Swan dive: 12. Leg full front: * Stage III: Cool-down: consists of three Pilates motions: 1. Rest position: 2. Cat with arm/leg extension: 3. Breathing:

BEHAVIORALBalance Program

Total Period: 12 Weeks. The designed HUMAC program will work on the modified clinical test of sensory integration of balance (mCTSIB) with eyes open and with eyes closed, the center of pressure (COP) and the limit of stability test (LOS).

BEHAVIORALCoordination

Total Period: 12 Weeks. Coordination will be assessed using BOT2, Bilateral coordination (Sub test No.4) composed of 7 items and Upper-Limb coordination (Sub test No.7) composed of 7 items too. The raw scores are recorded first then it is converted into point scores, then subtest total point score is obtained by adding point scores.

Sponsors

Children's Cancer Hospital Egypt 57357
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Intervention model description

Experimental controlled randomization using Block Stratified Randomized Software program, after obtaining informed consent from illegible patient or his caregiver.

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
5 Years to 12 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

1. Children with posterior fossa tumors during follow up. 2. Children between 5-12 years old. 3. Time elapsed since the start of treatment more than 4 months in order to be in maintenance phase. 4. They can understand verbal command. 5. Children with no visual, auditory or perceptual disorders. 6. Children are already treated surgically.

Exclusion criteria

* Children who have one or more of the following criteria will be excluded from the study: 1. Children with a genetic disorder or mental retardation. 2. Children with a chronic lung disease. 3. Sever cardiomyopathy (ejection fraction \<40%, ischemia and angina pectoris at rest). 4. Children with a neuromuscular disease not related to tumor.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Change Balanceat week 12For assessment of the three groups, HUMAC balance and tilt system will be used to assess both Static and dynamic balance.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Change Coordinationat week 12The Bruininks-Oseretsky Test of Motor Proficiency - Second Edition \- The minimum and maximum values: Coordination will be assessed using BOT2, Bilateral coordination (Sub test No.4) composed of 7 items and Upper-Limb coordination (Sub test No.7) composed of 7 items too. The raw scores are recorded first then it is converted into point scores, then subtest total point score is obtained by adding point scores. Bilateral Coordination: Total Point Score Subtest (min=Zero, max=24). Upper-Limb Coordination: Total Point Score Subtest (min=Zero, max=39). \- Higher scores mean a better outcome.

Countries

Egypt

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 12, 2026