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Motor Training to Treat Hand Dystonia - Article


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Benign Focal Amyotrophy

 




Clinical Trial: Motor Training to Treat Hand Dystonia

This study has been completed.

Sponsored by: National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Information provided by: Warren G Magnuson Clinical Center (CC)

Purpose

This study will evaluate the effect of motor training on focal hand dystonia in people with writer's cramp and will examine whether this training affects excitability of the motor cortex of the brain. In dystonia, muscle spasms cause uncontrolled twisting and repetitive movement or abnormal postures. Focal dystonia involves just one part of the body, such as the hand, neck or face. Patients with focal hand dystonia have difficulty with individualized finger movements, which may be due to increased excitability of the motor cortex.

Patients with hand dystonia 21 years of age or older may be eligible for this 2-month study. Those taking botulinum toxin injections must stop medication 3 months before entering the study.

Participants will undergo a complete neurologic examination. They will undergo motor training with "constraint-induced movement therapy." This therapy involves constraining some fingers while allowing others to move. Participants will have the following tests and procedures at baseline (before motor training), after 4 weeks of motor training, and again after 8 weeks:

- Handwriting analysis - A computerized program evaluates the degree of "automatic movements" the patient uses in writing, as well as writing pressure and speed.

- Symptoms evaluation - Patients fill out a written questionnaire about symptoms and rate their improvement, if any, after training.

- Transcranial magnetic stimulation - The patient is seated in a comfortable chair, and an insulated wire coil is placed on the scalp. Brief electrical currents pass through the coil, creating magnetic pulses that travel to the brain. These pulses generate very small electrical currents in the brain cortex, briefly disrupting the function of the brain cells in the stimulated area. The stimulation may cause muscle twitching or tingling in the scalp, face, arm or hand. During the stimulation, the patient is asked to slightly tense certain muscles in the hand or arm or perform simple actions. Electrodes are taped to the skin over the muscles activated by the stimulation, and the electrical activity in the muscles will be recorded with a computer.

- Electroencephalogram (EEG) - Wire electrodes are taped to the scalp or placed on a Lycra cap the patient wears to record the brain's electrical activity.

Participants will have 50-minute motor training sessions 3 times during the first week of the study, twice the second week and once each in weeks 3 and 4. In addition, they will be required to practice the training at home for 25 minutes each day during week 1 and 50 minutes each day for the remaining 3 weeks. Fingers not being trained will be splinted.

Condition Phase
Focal Dystonia
Phase II

MedlinePlus related topics:  Movement Disorders

Study Type: Interventional
Study Design: Treatment, Safety/Efficacy

Official Title: Motor Training as Treatment of Focal Hand Dystonia

Further Study Details: 

Expected Total Enrollment:  15

Study start: August 3, 2001;  Study completion: August 1, 2002

Dystonia is a movement disorder characterized by sustained muscle contractions generating twisting and repetitive movements or abnormal postures. Abnormalities of the motor cortex have been shown in patients with focal hand dystonia. In addition it is well known that dystonic patients have co-contraction of their antagonist muscles, and that individualized finger movements are imprecise and difficult. Motor training such as "constraint-induced movement therapy" has been described to be successful in patients with musician's cramp. We therefore hypothesize that motor training with training of individualized finger movements could improve focal hand dystonia in patients with writer's cramp. We propose to study one group of twelve patients with either pure or dystonic writer's cramp. Patients will receive individualized finger training with immobilization of fingers that are not in training. Evaluation for improvement will be done with a handwriting analysis program developed by Mai and Marquardt, and clinical evaluation with the Fahn-Dystonia Scale.

Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) studies have shown that patients with dystonia have less intracortical inhibition compared with normal subjects, leading to excessive cortical activity and possibly to co-contraction of agonist-antagonist groups of muscles of the forearm resulting in dystonic posturing. Furthermore, studies in other basal ganglia disorders as well as dystonia have suggested that the movement related cortical potentials might show plastic changes that reflect the degree of "successful" performance of a motor task. We therefore would like to evaluate the excitability of the motor cortex before and after the training with TMS and movement related cortical potentials.

Eligibility

Genders Eligible for Study:  Both

Criteria

Subjects must be 21 years of age or older.
Each patient entered into the study must be free of serious somatic disease as determined by a standard physical and neurological examination.
Patients receiving botulinum-toxin treatment or other medications for the past three months prior to entering the study are not eligible.
Patients who have a pacemaker, an implanted medication pump, a metal plate in the skull, metal objects inside the eye or skull (for example, after brain surgery or a shrapnel wound) or any recent (less than three months) brain lesions cannot be included.

Location Information


Maryland
      National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), 9000 Rockville Pike,  Bethesda,  Maryland,  20892,  United States

More Information

Publications

Byl N, Wilson F, Merzenich M, Melnick M, Scott P, Oakes A, McKenzie A. Sensory dysfunction associated with repetitive strain injuries of tendinitis and focal hand dystonia: a comparative study. J Orthop Sports Phys Ther. 1996 Apr;23(4):234-44.

Byl NN, Melnick M. The neural consequences of repetition: clinical implications of a learning hypothesis. J Hand Ther. 1997 Apr-Jun;10(2):160-74.

Fahn S, Bressman SB, Marsden CD. Classification of dystonia. Adv Neurol. 1998;78:1-10. Review. No abstract available.

Study ID Numbers:  010217; 01-N-0217
Record last reviewed:  August 1, 2002
Last Updated:  December 11, 2002
Record first received:  August 8, 2001
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:  NCT00021853
Health Authority: United States: Federal Government
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on 2005-04-08


Source: ClinicalTrials.gov
Cache Date: April 9, 2005

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November 28, 2009



Page Updated: September 6, 2005
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