Impact of instrumental analysis of stiff knee gait on treatment appropriateness and associated costs in stroke patients.
Abstract
[BACKGROUND] Stiff Knee Gait (SKG) in stroke patients is typically treated by the inhibition of the rectus femoris (RF) with botulinum toxin (BoNT) after clinical evaluation, obtaining an average pooled recovery in knee flexion (KF) of 7 degrees.
[PURPOSE] Our hypothesis is that this limited recovery after BoNT could depend on the inadequacy in the selection of patients to be treated. The aim of this study was to assess the percentage of inappropriate treatments (PIT) that can be avoided when instrumental gait analysis (GA) is used, and to estimate the associated cost savings.
[METHODS] We retrospectively analyzed GA data from chronic stroke patients with SKG and clinically assessed knee extensors spasticity referred to our laboratory over a five-year period. Gait kinematics and dynamic electromyography data were used. Patients were considered unsuitable for RF inhibition when: their SKG was determined by inadequate ankle push-off (APO) rather than by a brake from knee extensors, based on a previously published algorithm using gait kinematics (PIT); when RF was not active during KF (PIT); and when a proximal braking mechanism was found, if this was not due to RF activity (PIT).
[RESULTS] 160 patients, age 20-87 years, gait speed 9-77%height/s, KF peak -4-44 degrees, were included. Of these, in 119 cases poor APO was the main cause of SKG, thus leading to PIT = 74%. In 48 out of 107 non-obese subjects, RF spasticity was not involved in SKG, resulting in PIT = 45%. Finally, patients with a braking activity as the main cause and concurrent RF activity were 20/107 = 19%, resulting in PIT = 81% SIGNIFICANCE: When treating SKG, proper use of GA can reduce the percentage of inappropriate treatments by BoNT at the RF up to 81%. Savings are in the order of €100k/year when considering centers treating 100 or more patients/year.
[PURPOSE] Our hypothesis is that this limited recovery after BoNT could depend on the inadequacy in the selection of patients to be treated. The aim of this study was to assess the percentage of inappropriate treatments (PIT) that can be avoided when instrumental gait analysis (GA) is used, and to estimate the associated cost savings.
[METHODS] We retrospectively analyzed GA data from chronic stroke patients with SKG and clinically assessed knee extensors spasticity referred to our laboratory over a five-year period. Gait kinematics and dynamic electromyography data were used. Patients were considered unsuitable for RF inhibition when: their SKG was determined by inadequate ankle push-off (APO) rather than by a brake from knee extensors, based on a previously published algorithm using gait kinematics (PIT); when RF was not active during KF (PIT); and when a proximal braking mechanism was found, if this was not due to RF activity (PIT).
[RESULTS] 160 patients, age 20-87 years, gait speed 9-77%height/s, KF peak -4-44 degrees, were included. Of these, in 119 cases poor APO was the main cause of SKG, thus leading to PIT = 74%. In 48 out of 107 non-obese subjects, RF spasticity was not involved in SKG, resulting in PIT = 45%. Finally, patients with a braking activity as the main cause and concurrent RF activity were 20/107 = 19%, resulting in PIT = 81% SIGNIFICANCE: When treating SKG, proper use of GA can reduce the percentage of inappropriate treatments by BoNT at the RF up to 81%. Savings are in the order of €100k/year when considering centers treating 100 or more patients/year.
추출된 의학 개체 (NER)
| 유형 | 영어 표현 | 한국어 / 풀이 | UMLS CUI | 출처 | 등장 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 시술 | botulinum toxin
|
보툴리눔독소 주사 | dict | 1 |
MeSH Terms
Adult; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Biomechanical Phenomena; Botulinum Toxins; Cost-Benefit Analysis; Electromyography; Female; Gait; Gait Disorders, Neurologic; Humans; Italy; Knee Joint; Male; Middle Aged; Muscle Spasticity; Quadriceps Muscle; Retrospective Studies; Stroke; Unnecessary Procedures; Young Adult
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