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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04743284

Tele-Assessment and Face-to-Face Evaluation of Balance in MS

The Agreement Between Face-to-Face and Tele-Assessment of Balance Tests in Patient With Multiple Sclerosis

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
40 (actual)
Sponsor
Istanbul University - Cerrahpasa · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

MS is characterized by clinical symptoms caused by lesions of the brain, spinal cord, or optic nerves that can affect balance, gait, and risk of falls. 50-80% of patients with MS have different levels of balance-related pathological findings. In addition, the imbalance is one of the most complained about findings by MS patients. Balance and postural control disorders are the most common signs in patients with cerebellar tract damage. Many patients have reported problems with balance and gait causing serious disability. Therefore, disorders of balance and postural control in patients with MS are associated with difficulty in standing and performing functional activities. Effective quantitative methods are needed to assess postural imbalance to help clinicians assess the progression of this disorder. Current literature suggests that home tele-rehabilitation and tele-medicine practices may be an alternative method effective enough to be equivalent to face-to-face physiotherapy treatments for patients with Ms. The advantages of Tele-medicine over normal care include increased social support, participant engagement, quality of care, cost-effectiveness, access to services (due to lack of transportation), and reducing the burden on healthcare professionals to make services easier to deploy. In cases such as Pandemic conditions, where face-to-face service is disrupted in clinics, tele-rehabilitation can be applied as a suitable alternative treatment method accessible to patients. The effectiveness of Tele-rehabilitation raises the question of whether tele-evaluation is as effective and accurate as in the clinic. Studies examining the effectiveness of Tele-assesment are still insufficient. The study is planned to address this deficiency. The aim of this study is to compare the results of MS patients by applying valid and reliable methods used in balance assessment with face-to-face and online access methods, thereby investigating the effectiveness of balance assessment through online access. The hypothesis in this study is that the results of the balance assessment with online access in MS patients will be consistent with the results of the balance assessment conducted face-to-face. H0: Tele-assessments of balance do not give the same results as face-to-face balance assessments in MS patients. H1: Tele-assessments of balance do not give the same results as face-to-face balance assessments in MS patients.

Detailed description

Voluntary patients who have been diagnosed with MS will be included in the study. Signed voluntary consent will be obtained from participants. Participants will be divided into two groups. Tele-assessment will be applied to one group first, and face-to-face assessment will be applied to the other group first.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2021-03-05
Primary completion
2022-01-16
Completion
2022-03-07
First posted
2021-02-08
Last updated
2024-03-21

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Turkey (Türkiye)

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04743284. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.