Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02879786

Study of Hierarchy of Afferents in Postural Control of Children With Dyslexia

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
68 (actual)
Sponsor
Central Hospital, Nancy, France · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
8 Years – 13 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The purpose is to determine the hierarchy of sensory afferents according to different forms of dyslexia in children. The secondary purpose is to determine sensitive and sufficiently specific posturographic indexes for standard diagnosis of different types of dyslexia.

Detailed description

This study evaluates the postural control and the importance of proprioception, evaluated by static and dynamic posturography, in dyslexic children compared to age-matched control group. Posturographic data and a questionnaire for motion sickness disorder are used as proprioceptive disorder index. This study aims to better characterize the dyslexic population with techniques targeting central integration of sensory proprioceptive afferents. The purpose of this study is not to search for a postural deficiency syndrome, but to study proprioception with posturography, with quantitative and normalized data of analyzed population. Moreover, these data could allow an objective evaluation of reeducation with quantifiable and reproducible parameters in order to judge its effectiveness. The demonstration of the existence of a relationship between proprioceptive disorders and dyslexia will imply a specific reeducation care of patients. A study using validated and standard indexes is necessary. The presence of postural disorders and a major susceptibility to motion sickness could contribute to distinguish different forms of dyslexia and thus be complementary to actual medical, orthophonic and neuropsychological criteria. In this evaluation, it is important to distinguish between visuo-attentional dyslexia from phonological dyslexia involving distinct anatomo-functional neuronal circuits.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERPosturographic tests
OTHERQuestionnaire of motion sickness susceptibility

Timeline

Start date
2011-07-01
Primary completion
2015-06-01
Completion
2015-06-01
First posted
2016-08-26
Last updated
2016-08-26

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02879786. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.