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Robotic treadmill training may help walking in children with cerebral palsy

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Robotic treadmill training may help walking in children with cerebral palsy
Photo by Sam Moghadam / Unsplash

Researchers studied whether adding robotic-assisted treadmill training to regular physical therapy could help children with a type of cerebral palsy called spastic diplegia walk better. The study involved 40 children between 6 and 11 years old who could walk but had an abnormal gait. They were split into two groups: one received the robotic training plus their usual therapy, and the other received only their usual therapy.

The group that received the extra robotic training showed statistically significant improvements in several walking measures. These included walking speed, step length, step symmetry, and how far they could walk in six minutes, compared to the group that only had regular therapy.

It is important to be cautious about these results. The study was small, and the published abstract does not tell us how big these improvements actually were in practical terms. We also don't know if the children felt the training was comfortable or if there were any safety concerns, as that data wasn't reported. Readers should see this as a promising early signal that this type of training might be a helpful add-on to therapy, but more detailed research is needed to understand its true value and safety.

What this means for you:
Early study shows robotic training may help walking in kids with cerebral palsy, but more research is needed on its real-world impact.
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