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HABIT (Hand Arm Bimanual Intensive Therapy)

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HABIT (Hand Arm Bimanual Intensive Therapy) M.S.Rekha SpR Paediatrics * * * * * * * * * * * Outline Cerebral palsy Embryology and patho-physiology Key issues ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: HABIT (Hand Arm Bimanual Intensive Therapy)


1
HABIT (Hand Arm Bimanual Intensive Therapy)
  • M.S.Rekha
  • SpR Paediatrics

2
Outline
  • Cerebral palsy
  • Embryology and patho-physiology
  • Key issues affecting therapy
  • HABIT
  • Future

3
Cerebral Palsy
  • CP incidence 1500
  • 36 Hemiplegic CP
  • UL gt LL
  • Impairment
  • Spasticity, Posturing, Sensation, Reduced
    strength
  • Intellectual capacity
  • Impact

4
UL problems in CP
  • Integrity of motor cortex and cortico-spinal
    tracts affected
  • Precision grasping affected
  • Fine control of hands and fingers affected
  • Abnormal tone
  • Abnormal posturing
  • Tactile and proprioceptive disturbances

5
Therapy - Pathophysiology
  • How nervous system develops and functions
  • Basis for the neural impairments
  • Neurogenesis
  • Neuroplasticity
  • Synaptogenesis
  • Cortical Maps
  • Long term potentiation
  • Primary areas
  • Stem cells

6
Key issues
  • Problems with bimanual coordination gt uni-manual
    deficit
  • Restraining a childs non-involved limb
  • invasive
  • frustrating
  • de-motivating
  • Children have never learned to use the affected
    limb

7
CIMT
  • Developed in adult to overcome learned non-use
    (children have to overcome developmental non-use)
  • Invasive
    (it is practice
    not the restraint which helps)
  • Uni-manual vs bimanual skills training
    (children compensate well with non-involved
    limb but not effectively)

8
HABIT
  • Motor learning
  • Neuroplasticity
  • Use of involved hand as a typically developing
    child uses non-dominant hand
  • Practice Improvement in function
  • Structured practice based on how CNS responds
  • Ensure
  • Optimum task response
  • Gradually increase complexity
  • Motivation, Rewards

9
Evidence
  • 1 Single blinded RCT (Gordon et al, 2007)
  • Hemiplegic CP with Mild Moderate hand
    involvement
  • 20 children (3.5 15.5 yrs)
  • Randomized to intervention or delayed treatment
    control group
  • Evaluation before and after and 1mth post
    intervention
  • Assisting Hand Assessment
  • Increased involved extremity use (Accelerometry
    Caregiver survey)
  • Bimanual items of Bruiniknks-Oseretsky test of
    Motor proficiency
  • Jebsen-Taylor test of hand function
  • Simultaneity of completing a draw opening task
    with 2 hands (plt0.)5 in all cases)

10
HABIT
  • Select task Functional activities - bimanual
    hand use (based on individual child)
  • Ground rules re use of non-involved limb
  • Structured practice for 15 20 mins at a time
    (6 hours /day for 10 days)
  • Gradually increasing in complexity (tailored to
    each child)
  • Child friendly (goals, parental involvement)
  • Home practice 1 hr/day during and 2hrs/day after
    intervention

11
Taken from presentation by Charles Gordon on
web Intensity-based rehabilitation of the upper
extremity in children with congenital hemiplegia
12
HABIT (Charles Gordon, 2006)
13
Future
  • Larger, robust, multi-centre RCTs would be needed
    comparing different strategies
  • Boyd et al, 2010 conducting RCT comparing CIMT
    and BIM training

14
References
  • Development of hand-arm bimanual intensive
    training (HABIT) for improving bimanual
    coordination in children with hemiplegic cerebral
    palsy. Charles J Gordon A, Developmental
    Medicine Child Neurology, 2006
    Nov48(11)931-6.
  • Efficacy of a hand-arm bimanual intensive therapy
    (HABIT) in children with hemiplegic cerebral
    palsy a randomized control trial, Gordon et al,
    Developmental Medicine Child Neurology, 2007
    Nov49(11)830-8.
  • Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of
    Therapeutic Management of Upper-Limb Dysfunction,
    Sakzewski et al. Pediatrics.2009 123 1111-1122.
  • INCITE A randomised trial comparing constraint
    induced movement therapy and bimanual training in
    children with congenital hemiplegia, Boyd et al.
    BMC Neurology 2010, 104 http//www.biomedcentral.
    com/1471-2377/10/4
  • Neuroplasticity in Children, Mundkur N, Indian
    Journal of Paediatrics, 2005 72 (10) 855 - 7

15
  • Thank you
  • Questions?

16
Neurogenesis
  • Prenatal
  • Neurogenesis
  • Neuronal proliferation
  • Migration Aggregation
  • Axonal growth synaptogenesis
  • Postnatal
  • Synaptogenesis and myelination till 2yrs
  • Process continues at reduced rate
  • Synaptic pruning
  • Dynamic state
  • Birth 2500 connections
  • _at_15,000 (double the adult size) at the age of
    2yrs
  • Apoptosis Pruning

17
Neuroplasticity
  • Ability of the brain to constantly reorganise
    neural pathways based on new experience and
    learning
  • Ability of brain to change with learning
  • Several processes involved
  • Different types of plasticity at different times
  • Developmental/Adaptive
  • Environmental

18
Neuroplasticity
  • Individual connections - strengthened or removed
  • Neurons that fire together wire together
  • Neurons active together - synapses strengthened
    preserved
  • Those not active are pruned (continues till
    16yrs)
  • Activity between close neurons leads to
    cortical maps becoming
    one
  • Neural development
  • Gene expression
  • Neurotransmitters
  • Neurotrophins

19
Adaptation
  • Capacity to adapt and change connections in
    response to new information, stimulation, damage
  • Reorganisation of cellular neural networks
  • Synapses formed in response to stimulation
  • Long term potentiation
  • Primary areas not fixed
  • Neurogenesis after damage

20
Neuroplasticity
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