Functional effects of botulinum toxin type-A treatment and subsequent stretching of spastic calf muscles: a study in patients with hereditary spastic paraplegia.

Authors

  • Mark de Niet
  • Susanne T. de Bot
  • Bart P.C. van de Warrenburg
  • Vivian Weerdesteyn
  • Alexander C. Geurts

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-1909

Keywords:

hereditary spastic paraplegia, botulinum toxin type-A, muscle spasticity, gait, balance.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Although calf muscle spasticity is often treated with botulinum toxin type-A, the effects on balance and gait are ambiguous. Hereditary spastic paraplegia is characterized by progressive spasticity and relatively mild muscle weakness of the lower limbs. It is therefore a good model to evaluate the functional effects of botulinum toxin type-A. DESIGN: Explorative pre-post intervention study. SUBJECTS: Fifteen subjects with pure hereditary spastic paraplegia. METHODS: Patients with symptomatic calf muscle spasticity and preserved calf muscle strength received botulinum toxin type-A injections in each triceps surae (Dysport®, 500-750 MU) followed by daily stretching exercises (18 weeks). Before intervention (T0), and 4 (T1) and 18 (T2) weeks thereafter, gait, balance, motor selectivity, calf muscle tone and strength were tested. RESULTS: Mean comfortable gait velocity increased from T0 (0.90 m/s (standard deviation (SD) 0.18)) to T1 (0.98 m/s (SD 0.20)), which effect persisted at T2, whereas balance and other functional measures remained unchanged. Calf muscle tone declined from T0 (median 2

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Published

2014-10-14

How to Cite

de Niet, M., de Bot, S. T., van de Warrenburg, B. P., Weerdesteyn, V., & Geurts, A. C. (2014). Functional effects of botulinum toxin type-A treatment and subsequent stretching of spastic calf muscles: a study in patients with hereditary spastic paraplegia. Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 47(2), 147–153. https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-1909

Issue

Section

Original Report