Dystonia and choreoathetosis presence and severity in relation to powered wheelchair mobility performance in children and youth with dyskinetic cerebral palsy.

2020 
Abstract Introduction Power wheelchairs (PW) with head/foot steering systems are used as an alternative to joysticks in children with severe dyskinetic cerebral palsy (DCP). Mobility training programs are unstandardized to date, and insight on dystonia, choreoathetosis, and mobility performance may lead to greater independent mobility. Objective To map the presence and severity of dystonia and choreoathetosis during PW mobility in DCP and their relation with mobility performance. Methods Ten participants with DCP performed four PW mobility tasks using a head/foot steering system. Dystonia and choreoathetosis in the neck and arm regions were evaluated using the Dyskinesia Impairment Mobility Scale (DIMS). PW mobility performance was assessed using time-on-task and the number of errors during performance. The Wilcoxon-signed rank test and the Spearman's correlation coefficients were used to explore differences and correlations. Results Median levels of dystonia (83.6%) were significantly higher (p  Conclusions Dystonia is more present and severe during PW mobility than choreoathetosis. The hypertonic hallmark of dystonia may mask the hyperkinetic hallmark of choreoathetosis, resulting in lower median levels. Results may suggest that with an increase in driving experience, children with DCP adopt deliberate strategies to minimize the negative impact of arm overflow movements on mobility performance, however, future research with bigger sample size and additional outcome measures is strongly encouraged.
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