1 / 41

Developmental Coordination Disorder in the Preterm Infant. .

Developmental Coordination Disorder in the Preterm Infant. Incorporation of movement strategies to promote typical developmental progression. Liz Bishop, PT, DPT, PCS LBishop.DPT@gmail.com. Focus points for today. Movement strategies when working with the preterm infant population

Faraday
Download Presentation

Developmental Coordination Disorder in the Preterm Infant. .

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Developmental Coordination Disorder in the Preterm Infant.. Incorporation of movement strategies to promote typical developmental progression Liz Bishop, PT, DPT, PCS LBishop.DPT@gmail.com

  2. Focus points for today • Movement strategies when working with the preterm infant population • Hands on components to incorporate directly into practice • Encouraging Family/Caregiver buy-in and comfort • Therapeutic aides

  3. Take home/What to incorporate into your practice • Identify poor movement strategies used by pre-term infants. • Understand the family friendly approach to encourage home participation in interventions. • Demonstrate tactile and verbal cues to encourage typical developmental progression.

  4. What is DCD? • DSM IV: • Skill attainment below expected for age • Interferes with academics or ADLs • Onset of symptoms was early in development • Has to be in excess of expected abilities when intellectual disability or vision impairment is present • Not explained by neurologic disease

  5. When to seek a diagnosis of DCD • “Clumsy child” • Difficulty in social circumstances • Problems with ADLs • Poor sport participation • Behavioral issues • Tendency to become obese (male>female)

  6. What is the base issue in DCD? Research findings: • Motor coordination due to underlying sensory integration issue • Visual Memory Deficits • Kinesthetic/Perceptual Deficits • Motor Planning Deficits • Heavy Reliance on Visual Feedback

  7. Testing for DCD • BruininksOseretsky Test of Motor Proficiency (BOT) • Movement Assessment Battery for Children (M-ABC) • Developmental Coordination Disorder Questionnaire (DCDQ)

  8. BOT-2 • Fine Motor • Fine Manual Control (precision/Integration) • Manual Coordination (Dexterity/Coordination) • Gross Motor • Body Coordination • Strength/Agility

  9. M-ABC • Takes an observational approach • Checklist for classroom teacher • Evaluates 3 areas • Manual dexterity • Ball skills • Balance (static/dynamic) • https://youtu.be/9ZjQILd5esk

  10. DCDQ • Parent report that ranks child’s skills 1-5 with 5 being typically functioning/minimal difficulty

  11. Prevalence of DCD • Males are more likely to be diagnosed, nearly 2:1, however, recent research suggests more even presentation across gender • High prevalence in preterm population • Approximately 5-6% of school aged children suspected DCD • Up to10% are deemed to be “clumsy”

  12. Why preterm population? • Developmental Coordination Disorder in School-Aged Children Born Very Pre-Term and/or at Very Low Birth Weight: A Systematic Review • Found significantly more likely to receive dx of DCD • Calls for early identification • Calls for research into why this occurs in pre-term infants

  13. Full Term Infant • 37-40 weeks • Birth weight 6-9lbs • Fetal position (physiological flexion) • Vaginal Birth • Full in-utero development has occurred • Lungs • Feeding • Able to tolerate handling & enjoys close contact with parents

  14. Preterm Infant • Viable pregnancy is 24wks • Birth weight as little as 1lb or less • Full body extension • Frequently emergency C-Section • Prior to significant development in-utero • Unable to tolerate handling/contact with parents

  15. Comparison at 28weeks

  16. Pre term infant in NICU- effects on parents • Life preserving equipment • Unable to hold their child regularly • Constant medical staff • Witness their child struggling/uncomfortable and unable to assist • Huge financial strain • Work/home vs. being with their child

  17. Identifying possible DCD • Risk factors • Preterm? • Other possible diagnoses at play? • CP? • DMD? • Progression of development • Delayed beyond adjusted age? • Movement patterns • Do they appear typical or odd/compensatory?

  18. Identification of poor movement strategies • Extension patterning/full body movement vs. muscle isolation • Asymmetries between sides • Muscle tone • Is child able to piece movements together fluidly? • What appears to be the main issue? Sensory vs. motor planning

  19. Treatment Approaches • Task specific: Find area of participation and work specifically to achieve improved participation • Impairment based: Find impaired system and specifically target- Sensory systems, proprioception, heavy reliance on vision, etc.

  20. Top Down- Task specific • Multiple repetitions with tactile and verbal cues, gradually weaning as child demonstrates skill progression • Begin simple and increase difficulty as child masters/becomes confident • Generalize skills in multiple settings

  21. Tactile/Verbal Cues • Many research articles point to poor proprioception/motor planning • Repetition. Repetition. Repetition. • Therapist hands on then wean to independence • Keep verbal cues consistent and brief • “Hand” vs. “Put your hand here.”

  22. Bottom up- Sensory integration • Body awareness • Positional awareness • Pressure input • Reflex integration • https://youtu.be/rCssTMZ7yzY • Aquatic therapy • https://youtu.be/iQJYHpWvvrc?t=44

  23. Treatment Approaches • Encourage physical activity for a lifetime • Multiple trials, avoiding failure • Educate parents to seek out appropriate activities • Encourage patience in parents from early on- “Try for 5” • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=91MtVYVKokE

  24. Therapeutic Strategies for Home • Use items already present within the home whenever possible • Incorporate strategies into play • Ask parents their biggest concerns/desires • Show parents how to specifically work on hands on strategies • Give specific goals and timeframes for each day- then reassess next visit

  25. Therapeutic Aides • SPIO • Sure Step SMO • Hip Helpers • Weighted push toys

  26. SPIO

  27. Sure Step SMO

  28. Hip Helpers

  29. Weighted/Braked push toys

  30. Case Study • Baby B, male • Born at 23 weeks weighing 1lb, 2oz. • Remained in NICU for 110 days • Came home on oxygen via nasal cannula • FTT • Currently 18 months; 14 mo adjusted

  31. HEP for Baby B • Hands on rolling practice- gradually giving child more responsibility • Sitting balance in laundry basket with movement • Sit to stand at surface with hands on assistance to break up extension pattern • Intermittent pressure • Slowing down movement progression

  32. Case Study • Baby K, female • Born at 23 weeks weighing 1lb 5oz • Remained in NICU for 5 months; 2 months intubated • Dx: Bilateral Grade II IVH; Stage 3 ROP repaired; bronchopulmonary dysplasia at discharge • Currently 17 months; 13 months adjusted

  33. HEP for Baby K • Rocking strategies; deep squeezes/joint compression • Hands on transitional progression movements, gradually giving more responsibility. • Utilized sensory strategies within each movement to make best gains

  34. Upcoming Research • Effects of Dual Tasking on Dynamic Postural Control • MaryJo Davenport- davenportm@slu.edu • SLU PT Program • Using GAITRite to compare probable DCD/DCD vs. typical child • Walking; stepping over object; singing ABCs; while wearing vibration waist band

  35. Hoped for Research/Standardized Assessment • Assess preterm infant population and determine possible/probable DCD • Educate parents on strategies to lessen impact of probable DCD • Strategies that work best to assist early development in probable DCD

  36. Summary • DCD is present in as many as 5-6% of school aged children • Premature infants are surviving at very early ages predisposed to DCD • Diagnosis occurs in school aged children • Various therapeutic strategies to assist in early movement patterns • Arm parents with knowledge, skills, and confidence to work through their child’s challenges.

  37. Questions?

  38. Personal Plug • www.Facebook.com/GTOT2015/ • http://gatewaytykesontrykes.org/

  39. Pediatric Therapists in STL • STL Pediatric Therapy Special Interest Group- Courtney Dunn • Courtney.dunn@bjc.org • https://www.facebook.com/groups/328730207519974/ • Upcoming May 2nd, 7pm • Orthopedic Management of Patients with Cerebral Palsy- Dr. PooyaHosseinzadeh • Children’s Hospital, Edison Cafeteria

  40. MO First Steps • Early Intervention program for Missouri • Great pay rates ($17/unit; mileage reimbursement) for independent contractors (easy to become this) • Currently in need of providers- especially PTs in St. Louis and surrounding areas • To become a provider on your own: • MOFirstSteps.com • “Providers” tab • “Enroll with First Steps”

  41. MO First Steps • Who to contact for enrollment • MOFirstSteps.com • “Home” tab at upper left hand corner • “SPOE Locations” • Find your region on the first page and then the contact person (Director of that SPOE) on the second page.

More Related