AI Article Synopsis

  • In stroke survivors, rectus femoris spasticity leads to altered gait patterns, such as stiff knee gait.
  • Botulinum toxin type A (BoNT-A) is effective for treating this spasticity, but accurate injection techniques, like ultrasound guidance, are often not used in practice.
  • A study of 47 stroke patients showed significant variability in rectus femoris characteristics, suggesting that using ultrasound for BoNT-A injections could improve treatment outcomes by accounting for individual differences.

Article Abstract

In stroke survivors, rectus femoris (RF) spasticity is often implicated in gait pattern alterations such as stiff knee gait (SKG). Botulinum toxin type A (BoNT-A) is considered the gold standard for focal spasticity treatment. However-even if the accuracy of injection is crucial for BoNT-A efficacy-instrumented guidance for BoNT-A injection is not routinely applied in clinical settings. In order to investigate the possible implications of an inadequate BoNT-A injection on patients' clinical outcome, we evaluated the ultrasound-derived RF characteristics (muscle depth, muscle thickness, cross-sectional area and mean echo intensity) in 47 stroke survivors. In our sample, we observed wide variability of RF depth in both hemiparetic and unaffected side of included patients (0.44 and 3.54 cm and between 0.25 and 3.16 cm, respectively). Moreover, our analysis did not show significant differences between treated and non-treated RF in stroke survivors. These results suggest that considering the inter-individual variability in RF muscle depth and thickness, injection guidance should be considered for BoNT-A treatment in order to optimize the clinical outcome of treated patients. In particular, ultrasound guidance may help the clinicians in the long-term follow-up of muscle quality.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7472004PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins12080490DOI Listing

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