Abstract

Background: Cerebral palsy (CP) is the most common cause of motor disability in children and can cause severe gait deviations. The sagittal gait patterns classification for children with bilateral CP is an important guideline for the planning of the rehabilitation process. Ankle foot orthoses should improve the biomechanical parameters of pathological gait in the sagittal plane. Methods: A systematic search of the literature was conducted to identify randomized controlled trials (RCT) and controlled clinical trials (CCT) which measured the effect of ankle foot orthoses (AFO) on the gait of children with spastic bilateral CP, with kinetic, kinematic, and functional outcomes. Five databases (Pubmed, Scopus, ISI Web of SCIENCE, SciELO, and Cochrane Library) were searched before February 2020. The PEDro Score was used to assess the methodological quality of the selected studies and alignment with the Cochrane approach was also reviewed. Prospero registration number: CRD42018102670. Results: We included 10 studies considering a total of 285 children with spastic bilateral CP. None of the studies had a PEDro score below 4/10, including five RCTs. We identified five different types of AFO (solid; dynamic; hinged; ground reaction; posterior leaf spring) used across all studies. Only two studies referred to a classification for gait patterns. Across the different outcomes, significant differences were found in walking speed, stride length and cadence, range of motion, ground force reaction and joint moments, as well as functional scores, while wearing AFO. Conclusions: Overall, the use of AFO in children with spastic bilateral CP minimizes the impact of pathological gait, consistently improving some kinematic, kinetic, and spatial-temporal parameters, and making their gait closer to that of typically developing children. Creating a standardized protocol for future studies involving AFO would facilitate the reporting of new scientific data and help clinicians use their clinical reasoning skills to recommend the best AFO for their patients.

Highlights

  • Due to the broad specter of physical presentations of children with Cerebral palsy (CP), the aim of this review is to determine the effects of different types of ankle foot orthoses on the gait of children with spastic bilateral CP, presenting specific recommendations for this particular subset, and whenever possible refer to its effects on the five different sagittal gait patterns [11]

  • The Gross Motor Function Measure scale (GMFM) percentage scores for all dimensions were significantly higher with the patients wearing the dynamic ankle foot orthoses (DAFO) (p < 0.001)

  • We identified five different types of orthoses: 178 participants used solid ankle foot orthoses (SAFO) [30,32,33,34,35,36,37], 57 participants used dynamic ankle foot orthoses (DAFO) [31,35,37,38], 24 participants used posterior leaf spring (PLS) [33,34], 46 participants used hinged ankle foot orthoses (HAFO) [33,36,38], and 19 participants used ground reaction ankle foot orthoses (GRAFO) [15]

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Summary

Introduction

Cerebral palsy (CP) is the most common cause of motor disability in children [1,2,3]. Instrumented clinical gait analysis has been a great tool for planning intervention and assessing outcomes in the rehabilitation process of children with. Cerebral palsy (CP) is the most common cause of motor disability in children and can cause severe gait deviations. The sagittal gait patterns classification for children with bilateral. Controlled clinical trials (CCT) which measured the effect of ankle foot orthoses (AFO) on the gait of children with spastic bilateral CP, with kinetic, kinematic, and functional outcomes. None of the studies had a PEDro score below 4/10, including five RCTs. We identified five different types of AFO (solid; dynamic; hinged; ground reaction; posterior leaf spring) used across all studies. Significant differences were found in walking speed, stride length and cadence, range of motion, ground force reaction and joint moments, as well as functional scores, while wearing AFO

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