Clinical Trial: Assessment of the Effects of Sheffield Support Snood in MND Patients

Study Status: Completed
Recruit Status: Completed
Study Type: Interventional

Official Title: Assessment of the Effects of Sheffield Support Snood in MND Patients

Brief Summary: The aim of this study is to evaluate the effects on MND patients of a new collar specifically designed for people affected by neck weakness: the Sheffield Support Snood.

Detailed Summary: Motor Neurone Disease (MND) is neurodegenerative disorder that leads to progressive weakness of limb, bulbar and respiratory muscles. The most common form of the disease is the Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS). Severe weakness of the neck extensor muscles is common in patients with ALS. Those patients are advised to wear a cervical collar, to improve their neck posture and social interaction. However the main limit of commercially available collars is that they are designed to immobilize the neck, which makes them uncomfortable and strenuous to wear for long time. The aim of this study is to evaluate the effects on MND patients of a new collar specifically designed for people affected by neck weakness: the Sheffield Support Snood. The assessment will be performed through the use of inertial sensors since they allow the measurement to be performed in real life settings (clinics/home) with reduced discomfort to the patient. Subjects will be asked to perform a series of active head movements (flexion, extension, axial rotation, lateral bending) with and without the collar and the range of movement measured in the two cases will be used to assess the support offered by the collar. Since in MND patients difficulty in perform active head movements is due to a severe weakness of the extensor muscles, with or without involvement of the neck flexors, this study will also investigate the activation of these muscles while the subject is performing the active head movements. A wireless surface electromyographic system (sEMG) will be used to this purpose. Patients able to perform a series of activities of daily living (ADL, ie: drinking, eating, washing hands) will be asked to perform the tasks both with and without the collar. The support perceived by the subjects while they are performing the ADL will be evaluated through a questionnaire specifically developed for this study.
Sponsor: Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

Current Primary Outcome:

  • angular velocity and acceleration measured by the inertial sensors [ Time Frame: while the subject is performing the head movements (Extension, flexion, axial rotation and lateral bending). Data collection will take approximately 30 minutes ]
  • electrical activity produced by the muscle measured by the EMG system [ Time Frame: while the subject is performing the head movements (Extension, flexion, axial rotation and lateral bending). Data collection will take approximately 30 minutes ]
  • Description of the support perceived. It will be evaluated through a questionnaire which will include a series of sentences that describe the support offered by the collar. The subjects will be asked to state how much they agree with those sentences. [ Time Frame: after the subject has performed the head movements (Extension, flexion, axial rotation and lateral bending). Answer the questionnaire will take approximately 10 minutes ]


Original Primary Outcome: Same as current

Current Secondary Outcome:

Original Secondary Outcome:

Information By: Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

Dates:
Date Received: April 23, 2015
Date Started: April 2015
Date Completion:
Last Updated: October 13, 2016
Last Verified: June 2015