230 likes | 1.15k Views
Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy: Rehabilitation Management. Introduction. Different types of rehabilitation needed through life Delivered mainly by physiotherapists and occupational therapists, but others may be involved Rehabiliation specialists Orthotists Providers of wheelchairs/other seating
E N D
Introduction • Different types of rehabilitation needed through life • Delivered mainly by physiotherapists and occupational therapists, but others may be involved • Rehabiliation specialists • Orthotists • Providers of wheelchairs/other seating • (Potentially) orthopaedic surgeons • Key: management of muscle extensibility and joint contractures • Stretching aims to preserve function and maintain comfort • Programme should be monitored by PT, but must become part of the family’s daily routine
Contractures • Factors contributing towards tendency towards contractures: • Muscles becoming less elastic due to limited use/positioning • Muscles out of balance around the joint • Maintaining good range of movement and symmetry is important • Maintains best possible function • Prevents development of fixed deformities • Prevents pressure problems with the skin
Management of muscle extensibility and joint contractures • Physiotherapist: key contact for contracture management • Ideally input from local PT supported by a specialist PT every 4 months • Stretching should be performed at least 4-6 times a week as part of family’s daily routine • Effective stretching may require a range of techniques including stretching, splinting, and standing devices
Stretches • Regular ankle, knee and hip stretching is important • Later, regular stretching at the arms becomes necessary – especially fingers, wrist, elbow and shoulder • Additional areas requiring stretching may be identified on individual examination • Standing programes (in a standing frame, or power chair with stander) are recommended after walking becomes impossible • Resting hand splints are appropriate for individuals with tight long-finger flexors
Splints • Night splints (ankle-foot orthoses/AFOs) can help control ankle contractures • Should be custom-made, not “off the shelf” • After loss of ambulation, daytime splints may be preferred • Daytime splints not recommended for ambulant boys • Long-leg splints (knee-ankle-foot-orthoses) may be useful at stage when walking is becoming very difficult or impossible • Can help control joint tightness, prolong ambulation, and delay the onset of scoliosis
Wheelchairs, seating and assistive equipment • Early ambulatory phase • Scooter, stroller, or wheelchair may be used for long distances to conserve strength • Posture is important: customisation of chair normally necessary • With increased difficulty walking, provision of powered wheelchair is recommended • This should be adapted/customised for comfort, posture and symmetry
Wheelchairs, seating and assistive equipment (2) • Arm strength becomes an issue over time • PTs/OTs can recommend assistive devices to maintain independence (e.g. alternative computer/environmental control access) • Proactive consideration of equipment allows timely provision • Additional adaptations in late ambulatory and non-ambulatory stages may be needed to help with getting upstairs, transferring, eating/drinking, turning in bed, and bathing
Recommendations for exercise • Limited research on type, frequency, and intensity of exercise that is optimum for DMD • High-resistance strength training and eccentric exercise are inappropriate across the lifespan • Concerns about contraction-induced muscle-fibre injury • To avoid disuse atrophy and other secondary complications of inactivity, all ambulatory and early non-ambulatory boys should participate in regular submaximal (gentle) functional strengthening/activity, including a combination of swimming-pool exercises and recreation-based exercises in the community
Recommendations for exercise (2) • Swimming may benefit aerobic conditioning and respiratory exercise: highly recommended from early ambulatory to early non-ambulatory phases (can be continued as long as medically safe) • Additional benefits may be provided by low-resistance strength training and optimisation of upper body function • Significant muscle pain or myoclobinuria in 24h period after a specific activity is a sign of overexertion and contraction-induced injury. If this occurs, the activity should be modified
Surgery: Introduction • No unequivocal situations where contracture surgery is invariably indicated • May be appropriate in some scenarios if lower-limb contractures are present despite range-of-motion exercises and splinting • Approach must be strictly individualised • Ankles (and to a lesser extent, knees) are most amenable to surgical correction/subsequent bracing • Hip responds poorly to surgery for fixed flexion contractures; cannot be effectively braced. Surgical release/lengthening of iliopsoas and other hip flexors may further weaken them, and make the patient unable to walk even with contracture correction. • In ambulant patients, hip deformity often self-correcting if knees/ankles straightened • Various surgical options exist: none can be recommended above any other.
Surgery: Early Ambulatory Phase • Procedures for early contractures include • Heel-cord (tendo-Achilles) lengthening for equinus contractures • Hamstring tendon lengthening for knee-flexion contractures • Anterior hip-muscle releases for hip-flexion contractures • Some clinics recommend that procedures are done before contractures develop: this approach is not widely practiced today
Surgery: Middle Ambulatory Phase (1) • Interventions aim to prolong ambulation: contracted joint can limit walking even if overall limb musculature has sufficient strength • Some evidence suggests walking can be prolonged 1-3 years by surgery • Difficulty of objective assessment: consensus difficult to achieve • Prolonged ambulation due to steroid use has further increased uncertainty of value of corrective surgery • Certain recommendations can be made irrespective of steroid status • Muscle strength/range of motion around individual joints should be considered before deciding upon surgery
Surgery: Middle Ambulatory Phase (2) • Approaches to lower-extremity surgery • Bilateral multi-level (hip-knee-ankle/knee ankle) procedures • Bilateral single-level (ankle) procedures • Rarely, unilateral single-level (ankle) procedures for asymmetric involvement • The surgeries involve tendon-lengthing, tendon transfer, tenotomy (cutting the tendon) along with release of fibrotic joint contractures (ankle) or removal of tight fibrous bands (iliotibial band at lateral thigh from hip to knee)
Surgery: Middle Ambulatory Phase (3) • Single-level surgery (e.g. correction of ankle equinus deformity >20°) not indicated if there are knee flexion contractures of 10° or greater and quadriceps strength of grade 3/5 or less • Equinus foot deformity (toe-walking) and varus foot deformities (severe inversion) can be corrected by heel-cord lengthening and tibialis posterior tendon transfer through the interosseous membrane onto the dorsolateral aspect of the foot to change plantar flexion-inversion activity of the tibialis posterior to dorsiflexion-eversion. • Hamstring lengthening behind knee generally needed if knee-flexion contracture of more than 15° • After tendon lengthening and tendon transfer, post-operative bracing may be needed, which should be discussed pre-operatively. • Following tenotomy, bracing is always needed.
Surgery: Middle Ambulatory Phase (4) • When surgery performed to maintain walking, patient must be mobilised using a walker or crutches on the first or second postoperative day to prevent further disuse atrophy of lower-extremity muscles. • Post-surgery walking must continue throughout limb immobilisation and post-cast rehabilitation. • An experienced team with close coordination between the orthopaedic surgeon, physical therapist, and orthotist is required.
Surgery: Late ambulatory & early non-ambulatory phases • Late ambulatory • Generally ineffective • Obscures benefits of more timely interventions • Early non-ambulatory • Some clinics perform extensive lower-extremity surgery/bracing to regain ambulation within 3-6 months of loss of walking ability • This is generally ineffective: not currently considered appropriate
Surgery: Late non-ambulatory phase • Severe equinus foot deformities (>30°) can be corrected with heel-cord lengthening or tenotomy • Varus deformities (if present) can be corrected with tibialis posterior tendon transfer, lengthening, or tenotomy. • This is done for specific symptomatic problems • Generally to alleviate pain/pressure • Allow the patient to wear shoes • Correctly place the feet on wheelchair footrests. • This approach is not recommended as routine
Pain Management • Very little currently known about pain in DMD • Patients should be asked whether pain is a problem, so it can be addressed/treated • Appropriate intervention relies on determining cause of pain • Pain often results from posture problems and difficulty getting comfortable. Interventions can include • Provision of appropriate/individualised orthoses • Standard drug treatment approaches (muscle relaxants, anti-inflammatory medications) • Consider interactions with other medications (e.g. steroids, NSAIDS) and side-effects, especially those which might affect cardiac and respiratory function • Rarely, orthopaedic intervention may be indicated for pain that cannot be managed in any other way, but which might respond to surgery • Back pain, especially in steroid-treated patients, should prompt careful checking for vertebral fractures which respond well to bisphosphonate treatment.
References & Resources • The Diagnosis and Management of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy, Bushby K et al, Lancet Neurology 2010 9 (1) 77-93 & Lancet Neurology 2010 9 (2) 177-189 • Particularly references, p186-188 • The Diagnosis and Management of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy: A Guide for Families • TREAT-NMD website: www.treat-nmd.eu • CARE-NMD website: www.care-nmd.eu