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Not Yet RecruitingNCT07407036

Conventional and Virtual Reality-Based Neuromuscular Rehabilitation in Scapholunate Instability

Electromyographic and Functional Analysis of Neuromuscular Rehabilitation Methods in Individuals With Scapholunate Instability: A Comparison of Conventional and Virtual Reality-Supported Interventions

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
36 (estimated)
Sponsor
Yeditepe University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Scapholunate instability is a common form of carpal instability that can cause wrist pain, weakness, and functional limitations during daily activities. Conservative rehabilitation approaches are frequently recommended in the early stages; however, there is no standardized rehabilitation protocol, and the effects of different neuromuscular rehabilitation methods have not been sufficiently investigated. The primary aim of this study is to comparatively examine the effects of conventional physiotherapy approaches and virtual reality-supported neuromuscular rehabilitation on forearm muscle activation patterns assessed using surface electromyography, wrist proprioceptive function (joint position sense), pain intensity, and functional improvement in individuals with scapholunate instability, and to identify clinically applicable rehabilitation protocol approaches for this population. In this single-blind randomized controlled trial, participants with pre-dynamic or dynamic scapholunate instability will be randomly assigned to either a conventional rehabilitation group or a virtual reality-supported rehabilitation group. Both groups will receive an 8-week rehabilitation program administered twice per week. Primary outcome measures will include electromyographically assessed forearm muscle activation and wrist proprioception. Secondary outcome measures will include pain intensity, grip strength, wrist muscle strength, and upper extremity functional outcomes assessed using validated clinical instruments. All outcome assessments will be performed before and after the intervention period by an assessor blinded to group allocation.

Detailed description

Scapholunate instability is the most common form of carpal instability and is characterized by disruption of the scapholunate interosseous ligament, leading to altered wrist kinematics, pain, reduced grip strength, proprioceptive deficits, and functional limitations. In the early (pre-dynamic and dynamic) stages of the condition, conservative management is recommended; however, standardized, evidence-based rehabilitation protocols are lacking. In particular, the neuromuscular mechanisms underlying wrist stabilization, muscle activation patterns, and proprioceptive control have not been sufficiently investigated using objective measurement methods. This randomized, single-blinded controlled trial is designed to compare the effects of conventional physiotherapy and virtual reality-supported neuromuscular rehabilitation in individuals with scapholunate instability. Participants diagnosed with pre-dynamic or dynamic scapholunate instability will be randomly allocated to either a conventional rehabilitation group or a virtual reality-supported rehabilitation group. Both groups will receive an 8-week intervention program consisting of two supervised sessions per week. The conventional rehabilitation program will focus on strengthening "scapholunate-friendly" wrist and forearm muscles, improving neuromuscular control, and enhancing wrist proprioception through progressive strengthening and proprioceptive exercises. The intervention group will receive the same conventional program supplemented with virtual reality-based rehabilitation games designed to promote task-oriented movement, sensorimotor integration, and real-time feedback. Outcome assessments will be conducted before and after the intervention by a blinded evaluator. Primary outcome measures will include wrist proprioception (joint position sense) and forearm muscle activation patterns assessed using surface electromyography. Secondary outcome measures will include pain intensity, grip strength, wrist muscle strength, pressure pain threshold, and upper extremity functional performance assessed using validated clinical outcome measures. The study aims to objectively evaluate neuromuscular and proprioceptive changes associated with different rehabilitation approaches and to determine whether virtual reality-supported rehabilitation provides additional benefits over conventional physiotherapy alone. The findings of this study are expected to contribute to the development of clinically applicable, evidence-based rehabilitation protocols for individuals with scapholunate instability and to provide insight into muscle activation strategies involved in wrist stabilization.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERConventional Physiotherapy GroupParticipants assigned to the conventional physiotherapy group will receive a structured neuromuscular rehabilitation program focusing on wrist and forearm stabilization. The intervention will include supervised strengthening exercises targeting scapholunate-friendly muscles, neuromuscular control exercises, and proprioceptive training aimed at improving wrist stability and functional movement patterns. Progressive resistance and task-oriented exercises will be used according to individual tolerance. The rehabilitation program will be administered twice per week for 8 weeks by a licensed physiotherapist.
OTHERVirtual Reality-Supported Neuromuscular RehabilitationParticipants in the virtual reality-supported rehabilitation group will receive the same conventional physiotherapy program as the control group. In addition, this group will participate in virtual reality-based therapeutic exercises delivered through sensor-based interactive games designed for upper extremity rehabilitation. These exercises will aim to enhance wrist and forearm motor control, proprioceptive feedback, and functional task performance by promoting controlled and task-oriented movement patterns. Virtual reality sessions will be supervised by a physiotherapist and integrated into the rehabilitation program with the same frequency and duration as the conventional intervention, administered twice per week over an 8-week period.

Timeline

Start date
2026-03-01
Primary completion
2026-12-01
Completion
2027-02-01
First posted
2026-02-12
Last updated
2026-02-12

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Turkey (Türkiye)

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07407036. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.