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Articles

Randomised trial of virtual reality gaming and physiotherapy on balance, gross motor performance and daily functions among children with bilateral spastic cerebral palsy

, , & ORCID Icon
Pages 117-126 | Received 08 Jul 2020, Accepted 11 Jan 2021, Published online: 03 Mar 2021
 

Abstract

Background

Balance issues and poor gross motor function affect the daily needs of children with cerebral palsy.

Purpose

The study objective was to examine the effects of virtual reality gaming and physiotherapy on balance, gross motor performance and daily functioning among children with bilateral spastic cerebral palsy.

Method

Thirty-eight children with bilateral spastic cerebral palsy aged 6–12 years with GMFCS- level II-III, Manual Ability Classification System level I-III participated in this randomized controlled trial. The experimental group performed virtual reality games and physiotherapy, while the control group underwent physiotherapy alone. The exercise intensity was 60 minutes session a day, 4-days a week for 6-weeks. Paediatric Balance Scale (PBS), Kids-Mini-Balance Evaluation System Test (Kids-Mini-BESTest), Gross Motor Function Measure-88 (GMFM-88), and Wee-Functional Independence Measure (WeeFIM) were the outcome measures collected at baseline, 6-week post-training and 2-months follow-up.

Results

The time by group interaction of repeated measures ANOVA revealed no statistical significance for all the outcome measures except Kids-Mini-BESTest (p < 0.05). The PBS and, Kids-Mini-BESTest improved by a mean (standard deviation) score of 5.1(1.7) and 8.7(2.8) points, respectively in the experimental group as compared to control group [3.4(1.6) and 5.8(2.5) points]. These gains remained at follow-up (p < 0.001).

Conclusion

Combined virtual reality gaming and physiotherapy is not superior over physiotherapy alone in improving the gross motor performance and daily functioning among children with bilateral spastic cerebral palsy. Virtual gaming, along with physiotherapy, appears to be beneficial in their balance capacity, warranting further trials to investigate the same in children with GMFCS level-III.

Acknowledgement

We are grateful to children with CP and their caregivers for their support.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

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