Addressing Neuromuscular Deficits for Improved Outcomes in Ankle Rehabilitation
Abstract
The primary purpose of this study will seek to identify lateral ankle sprain (LAS) patients that do not respond to physicalrehabilitation under a traditional medical model and who subsequently develop chronic ankle instability (CAI). The proposedstudy will evaluate established clinical outcomes along with innovative measures of brain and spinal cord function and anklejoint stability during a one-year follow-up after injury. Our hypothesis is that patients who develop CAI within one-year afterinjury will demonstrate poorer clinical outcomes, larger alterations in innovative measures of brain and spinal cord function,and early ankle joint cartilage turnover compared to the LAS patients that develop into Copers. The secondary purpose of thisstudy will be to transition the results to methods that can be applied in multiple rehabilitation settings across civilian andmilitary treatment facilities. We will determine which clinical measures are most related to the advanced brain and spinal cordmeasures.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Mar 14, 2020
- Accession Number
- AD1105541
Entities
People
- Andrew Golden
- David A. Powell
- Erik Wikstrom
- Matt Hoch
- Nathan G. Johnson
- Nick Heebner
- Phillip Gribble
Organizations
- University of Kentucky