Systematic review of the evidence on orthotic devices for the management of knee instability related to neuromuscular and central nervous system disorders

Autor: Dorothy McCaughan, Gita Ramdharry, Rory J O’Connor, Alison Booth, Margaret Phillips, Rocio Rodriguez-Lopez, Cynthia P Iglesias, Roy Bowers, Debra Fayter, Simon Lalor, Catriona McDaid, Joanne O’Connor
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2017
Předmět:
knee instability
Joint Instability
030506 rehabilitation
medicine.medical_specialty
Orthotic Devices
Activities of daily living
Neuromuscular disease
Knee Joint
alliedhealth
central nervous system disorder
Walking
Rehabilitation Medicine
03 medical and health sciences
Disability Evaluation
Quality of life (healthcare)
Physical medicine and rehabilitation
Patient satisfaction
systematic review
Central Nervous System Diseases
Activities of Daily Living
medicine
Humans
Pain Management
Spinal cord injury
Physical Therapy Modalities
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
business.industry
030503 health policy & services
Research
General Medicine
neuromuscular disease
medicine.disease
Orthotic device
Gait analysis
Physical therapy
Quality of Life
Accidental Falls
0305 other medical science
business
Psychosocial
RC
Zdroj: BMJ Open
ISSN: 2044-6055
Popis: ObjectivesTo assess the effectiveness of orthotic devices for the management of instability of the knee in adults with a neuromuscular disorder or central nervous system disorder.DesignA systematic review of primary studies.SettingCommunity.ParticipantsAdults with a neuromuscular disorder or central nervous system disorder and impaired walking ability due to instability of the knee.InterventionsOrthoses with the clinical aim of controlling knee instability, for example, knee-ankle-foot orthoses, ankle-foot orthoses and knee orthoses or mixed design with no restrictions in design or material.Primary and secondary outcome measuresCondition-specific or generic patient-reported outcome measures assessing function, disability, independence, activities of daily living, quality of life or psychosocial outcomes; pain; walking ability; functional assessments; biomechanical analysis; adverse effects; usage; patient satisfaction and the acceptability of a device; and resource utilisation data.ResultsTwenty-one studies including 478 patients were included. Orthotic devices were evaluated in patients with postpolio syndrome, poststroke syndrome, inclusion body myositis and spinal cord injury. The review included 2 randomised controlled trials (RCTs), 3 non-randomised controlled studies and 16 case series. Most were small, single-centre studies with only 6 of 21 following patients for 1 year or longer. They met between one and five of nine quality criteria and reported methods and results poorly. They mainly assessed outcomes related to gait analysis and energy consumption with limited use of standardised, validated, patient-reported outcome measures. There was an absence of evidence on outcomes of direct importance to patients such as reduction in pain and falls.ConclusionsThere is a need for high-quality research, particularly RCTs, of orthotic devices for knee instability related to neuromuscular and central nervous system conditions. This research should address outcomes important to patients. There may also be value in developing a national registry.Registration number systematic reviewPROSPERO (CRD42014010180).
Databáze: OpenAIRE