Under‐recognition of leg dystonia in people with cerebral palsy

Author:

Aravamuthan Bhooma1ORCID,Pearson Toni S.12,Chintalapati Keerthana1,Ueda Keisuke1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Pediatric Neurology, Department of Neurology Washington University School of Medicine St. Louis Missouri USA

2. Division of Neurology, Nationwide Children's Hospital Ohio State University Columbus Ohio USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveTo determine the rates of clinical under‐documentation of leg dystonia in people with cerebral palsy (CP).MethodsIn this prospective cohort study, we identified independently ambulatory people age 10–20 years with CP‐associated spasticity seen in a tertiary care CP center between 1/1/20 and 11/4/21. Three pediatric movement disorders specialists assessed gait videos from these visits for leg dystonia using the Global Dystonia Rating Scale. We compared the gold standard expert consensus assessment for each patient with the clinical documentation of dystonia during a contemporaneous CP center clinic visit and also with dystonia documentation longitudinally in their medical record.ResultsOf 116 people with CP‐associated spasticity assessed in this study, 70 were found to have leg dystonia in their gait videos. Only 13% of these 70 individuals (n = 9/70) had leg dystonia documented in their contemporaneous CP center clinic visit, even though they were assessed during this visit by clinicians well trained in CP and dystonia assessment. Even with repeated assessment, only 54% (n = 38/70) of these individuals had leg dystonia documented in their medical record.ConclusionsLeg dystonia is clinically under‐documented in people with CP‐associated spasticity, even when these people are evaluated by well‐trained clinicians. Longitudinal evaluation and vigilance for leg dystonia is critical to address this diagnostic gap.

Funder

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

Publisher

Wiley

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