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Topic:Cerebral Palsy

The interaction between horses and individuals with cerebral palsy involves therapeutic activities that utilize equine movement to promote physical and emotional benefits. Cerebral palsy is a neurological disorder that affects movement and muscle tone, often requiring interventions to improve motor skills and coordination. Equine-assisted activities, such as therapeutic riding, leverage the horse's rhythmic gait to influence the rider's posture, balance, and muscle control. These activities are designed to complement traditional therapeutic approaches, providing a dynamic environment for rehabilitation. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the methodologies, outcomes, and therapeutic implications of equine-assisted interventions for individuals with cerebral palsy.
Changes in trunk and head stability in children with cerebral palsy after hippotherapy: a pilot study.
Physical & occupational therapy in pediatrics    April 7, 2010   Volume 30, Issue 2 150-163 doi: 10.3109/01942630903517223
Shurtleff TL, Engsberg JR.Hippotherapy (HPOT) is a therapy that uses horse movement. This pilot investigation objectively evaluated the efficacy of HPOT in improving head/trunk stability in children with cerebral palsy (CP). The participants were six children with spastic diplegia and six children without disability. Head and trunk stability was challenged by using a motorized barrel and measured by a video motion capture system before and after a 12-week intervention of 45 min of HPOT a week. The variables measured were anterior-posterior (AP) translation of the head, and spine at five points and average AP head angle...
Changes in dynamic trunk/head stability and functional reach after hippotherapy.
Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation    July 7, 2009   Volume 90, Issue 7 1185-1195 doi: 10.1016/j.apmr.2009.01.026
Shurtleff TL, Standeven JW, Engsberg JR.To determine if hippotherapy (therapy using a horse) improves head/trunk stability and upper extremity (UE) reaching/targeting in children with spastic diplegia cerebral palsy (SDCP). Methods: Pre-postoperative follow-up with a 12-week intervention and 12-week washout period after intervention. Methods: A human performance laboratory with 6 camera video motion capture systems for testing. Methods: Eleven children (age 5-13y, average 8y) with SDCP, 8 children (age 5-13y, average 8y) without disabilities. Methods: Hippotherapy intervention performed at 3 therapeutic horseback riding centers. Met...
Animal-assisted therapy–a new trend in the treatment of children and adults.
Psychiatria Danubina    June 27, 2009   Volume 21, Issue 2 236-241 
Dimitrijević I.Animal-assisted therapy is a familiar method of treatment in the rehabilitation of many illnesses and conditions, but is still not applied sufficiently in our milieu. This paper gives an overview of the available literature and some of the research which demonstrates that the interaction between the patient, animal and therapist provides a context which improves communication, elevates self-confidence, reduces the symptoms of diseases, and improves the quality of life. The dog, cat, horse, birds and toy animals are most often used in therapy. Short-term contacts with animals are used, as well ...
Effects of hippotherapy on people with cerebral palsy from the users’ perspective: a qualitative study.
Physiotherapy theory and practice    April 23, 2009   Volume 25, Issue 3 174-192 doi: 10.1080/09593980902776662
Debuse D, Gibb C, Chandler C.Although there is now some evidence for specific effects of hippotherapy on people with cerebral palsy, these studies fail to provide a comprehensive picture of the effects of hippotherapy. This was the first qualitative study to explore the hippotherapy experience of people with cerebral palsy from a user perspective. The effects of hippotherapy and their context were of particular interest. Seventeen users aged from 4 to 63, with or without their parents, participated in focus groups or individual interviews in six centres in Britain and in Germany. The main effects of hippotherapy, as ident...
A randomized controlled trial of the impact of therapeutic horse riding on the quality of life, health, and function of children with cerebral palsy.
Developmental medicine and child neurology    February 5, 2009   Volume 51, Issue 2 111-88 doi: 10.1111/j.1469-8749.2008.03245.x
Davis E, Davies B, Wolfe R, Raadsveld R, Heine B, Thomason P, Dobson F, Graham HK.This randomized controlled trial examined whether therapeutic horse riding has a clinically significant impact on the physical function, health and quality of life (QoL) of children with cerebral palsy (CP). Ninety-nine children aged 4 to 12 years with no prior horse riding experience and various levels of impairment (Gross Motor Function Classification System Levels I-III) were randomized to intervention (10wks therapeutic programme; 26 males, 24 females; mean age 7y 8mo [SD 2y 5mo] or control (usual activities, 27 males, 22 females; mean age 8y 2mo [SD 2y 6mo]). Pre- and post-measures were c...
The effect of hippotherapy on postural control in sitting for children with cerebral palsy.
Physical & occupational therapy in pediatrics    November 23, 2007   Volume 27, Issue 4 23-42 
Hamill D, Washington KA, White OR.The purpose of this single subject research study was to examine the effects of a once weekly, 10-week hippotherapy program for three children, ages 27-54 months, with cerebral palsy. Participants were rated as Level V on the Gross Motor Function Classification System. The Sitting Dimension of the Gross Motor Function Measure was used to establish a baseline of sitting abilities, and was administered every 2 weeks during intervention. The Sitting Assessment Scale and the Gross Motor Function Measure were administered before, after, and 4 weeks postintervention. Parental perceptions of the hipp...
Heart rate response to therapeutic riding in children with cerebral palsy: an exploratory study.
Pediatric physical therapy : the official publication of the Section on Pediatrics of the American Physical Therapy Association    May 17, 2007   Volume 19, Issue 2 160-165 doi: 10.1097/PEP.0b013e31804a57a8
Dirienzo LN, Dirienzo LT, Baceski DA.The study was designed to document the heart rate response to therapeutic riding in children with cerebral palsy having mild-to-severe disability. Methods: Participants consisted of eight youth riders with cerebral palsy, divided into two groups: ambulatory and wheelchair dependent. The riders received continuous digital heart rate monitoring during 10 weekly 20-minute therapeutic horseback riding sessions. Results: The averaged resting, median, and peak heart rate values, as well as the peak percentage heart rate reserve values, were significantly higher in the wheelchair-dependent group. Con...
Horseback riding as therapy for children with cerebral palsy: is there evidence of its effectiveness?
Physical & occupational therapy in pediatrics    April 20, 2007   Volume 27, Issue 2 5-23 
Snider L, Korner-Bitensky N, Kammann C, Warner S, Saleh M.A systematic review of the literature on horseback riding therapy as an intervention for children with cerebral palsy (CP) was carried out. The terms horse, riding, hippotherapy, horseback riding therapy, equine movement therapy, and cerebral palsy were searched in electronic databases and hand searched. Retrieved articles were rated for methodological quality using PEDro scoring to assess the internal validity of randomized trials and the Newcastle Ottawa Quality Assessment Scale to assess cohort studies. PICO questioning (Population, Intervention, Comparison, and Outcomes) was used to identi...
Does horseback riding therapy or therapist-directed hippotherapy rehabilitate children with cerebral palsy?
Developmental medicine and child neurology    January 11, 2007   Volume 49, Issue 1 68-73 doi: 10.1017/s0012162207000175.x
Sterba JA.Quantitative (not qualitative) studies were sought investigating whether horseback riding used as therapy improves gross motor function in children with cerebral palsy (CP). Eleven published studies on instructor-directed, recreational horseback riding therapy (HBRT) and licensed-therapist-directed hippotherapy were identified, reviewed, and summarized for research design, methodological quality, therapy regimen, internal/external validity, results, and authors'conclusions. Methodological quality was moderate to good for all studies; some studies were limited by small sample size or lack of no...
An exploration of German and British physiotherapists’ views on the effects of hippotherapy and their measurement.
Physiotherapy theory and practice    January 7, 2006   Volume 21, Issue 4 219-242 doi: 10.1080/09593980500321143
Debuse D, Chandler C, Gibb C.Hippotherapy (Greek hippos = horse) is a specialised physiotherapy treatment that makes use of the horses' unique three-dimensional movement impulses at a walk to facilitate movement responses in patients sitting on the horse's back (Strauss, 2000). Despite a substantial body of anecdotal and clinical evidence for its benefits, research evidence for hippotherapy is sparse. This questionnaire survey was the first study in a series of investigations exploring the views of physiotherapists and people with cerebral palsy who use hippotherapy. These investigations, in turn, form the basis from whic...
Hippotherapy.
Physical medicine and rehabilitation clinics of North America    October 2, 2004   Volume 15, Issue 4 843-vii doi: 10.1016/j.pmr.2004.02.002
Meregillano G.Hippotherapy refers to the use of the movement of the horse asa treatment tool by physical therapists, occupational therapists,and speech-language therapists to address impairments, functional limitations, and disabilities in clients with neuromusculoskeletal dysfunction, such as cerebral palsy. Hippotherapy is used as part of an integrated treatment program to achieve functional outcomes. Hippotherapy engages the client in activities on the horse that are enjoyable and challenging. In the controlled hippotherapyenvironment, the therapist modifies the horse's movement and carefully grades sens...
[Advantages of ride therapy in different forms of infantile cerebral palsy (therapeutic riding)].
Zhurnal nevrologii i psikhiatrii imeni S.S. Korsakova    April 5, 2003   Volume 103, Issue 2 25-27 
Ionatamishvili NI, Tsverava DM, Loriia MSh, Avaliani LA.One hundred children with cerebral palsy, aged 3-14 years, were divided into two equal groups, the first one including 50 children assigned to ride therapy and the second one--to Bobath therapeutic gymnastics. All the patients underwent a functional examination, which was rated using score system worked out by the authors, thus enabling a quantitative evaluation of treatment efficacy. In all the cases, physical rehabilitation resulted in a positive but not the same effect, with ride therapy being significantly (p < 0.001) more beneficial treatment compared to therapeutic gymnastics. Ride thera...
[Horseback riding therapy in development of motor skills in infantile cerebral palsy].
Voprosy kurortologii, fizioterapii, i lechebnoi fizicheskoi kultury    February 21, 2003   Issue 6 45-47 
Ionatamishvili NI, Tsverava DM, Loria MSh, Avaliani LA, Chkhikvishvili TsSh.No abstract available
[Hippotherapy as a method for complex rehabilitation of patients with late residual stage of infantile cerebral palsy].
Zhurnal nevrologii i psikhiatrii imeni S.S. Korsakova    November 27, 2002   Volume 102, Issue 10 42-45 
Sokolov PL, Dremova GV, Samsonova SV.Influence and therapeutic efficacy of horseback riding (hippotherapy) as a method for complex rehabilitation of patients with late residual stage of infantile cerebral palsy were studied. Significant increase of a range of active and passive mosements in large joints of lower extremities, higher, indices of hand dynamometry on the left, of vital lung capacity as well as a relief of relief of reactive and personality anxiety and depression, higher motivation for rehabilitation treatment, etc., were registered. Neurophysiological study revealed significant changes of afferentation at stem and th...
Horseback riding in children with cerebral palsy: effect on gross motor function.
Developmental medicine and child neurology    May 30, 2002   Volume 44, Issue 5 301-308 doi: 10.1017/s0012162201002122
Sterba JA, Rogers BT, France AP, Vokes DA.The effects of recreational horseback riding therapy (HBRT) on gross motor function in children with cerebral palsy (CP: spastic diplegia, spastic quadriplegia, and spastic hemiplegia) were determined in a blinded study using the Gross Motor Function Measure (GMFM). Seventeen participants (nine females, eight males; mean age 9 years 10 months, SE 10 months) served as their own control. Their mean Gross Motor Function Classification System score was 2.7 (SD 0.4; range 1 to 5). HBRT was 1 hour per week for three riding sessions of 6 weeks per session (18 weeks). GMFM was determined every 6 weeks...
Ankle-foot orthoses: effect on gait in children with cerebral palsy.
Disability and rehabilitation    May 23, 2002   Volume 24, Issue 7 345-347 doi: 10.1080/0963820110090724
Dursun E, Dursun N, Alican D.In this study our aim was to evaluate the effectiveness of Ankle-Foot Orthoses (AFOs) on gait function in patients with spastic cerebral palsy for whom orthoses were indicated to control dynamic equines deformity. Methods: Twenty-four spastic cerebral palsied patients with dynamic equines deformity were included in the study. Videotape recordings were performed to each patient on the same day with barefoot and AFOs. Temporal distance factors including velocity, cadence, stride length, stride width and Clinical Gait Assessment Score (CGAS) were compared across two conditions. Results: The use o...
Influence of artificial saddle riding on postural stability in children with cerebral palsy.
Gait & posture    September 30, 1999   Volume 10, Issue 2 154-160 doi: 10.1016/s0966-6362(99)00028-4
Kuczyński M, Słonka K.Stability of quiet upright stance was investigated in 25 children with cerebral palsy at the beginning and the end of a 3-month period of therapy involving 20 min microprocessor-controlled saddle riding, performed twice a week. The traditional parameters of postural sway based on the centre-of-pressure analysis (range, standard deviation, mean speed and mean radius) dropped significantly over time confirming advantageous influence of this treatment. As a complementary tool, an autoregressive modelling technique was used allowing us to establish after each single ride considerable decreases in ...
Effect of an equine-movement therapy program on gait, energy expenditure, and motor function in children with spastic cerebral palsy: a pilot study.
Developmental medicine and child neurology    January 9, 1999   Volume 40, Issue 11 754-762 doi: 10.1111/j.1469-8749.1998.tb12344.x
McGibbon NH, Andrade CK, Widener G, Cintas HL.The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of an 8-week program of hippotherapy on energy expenditure during walking; on the gait dimensions of stride length, velocity, and cadence; and on performance on the Gross Motor Function Measure (GMFM) in five children with spastic cerebral palsy (CP). A repeated-measures within-subjects design was used consisting of two baseline measurements taken 8 weeks apart, followed by an 8-week intervention period, then a posttest. After hippotherapy, all five children showed a significant decrease (X2(r)=7.6, P<0.05) in energy expenditure during walk...
Traumatic carotid and vertebral artery dissection in a professional jockey: a cautionary tale.
British journal of sports medicine    June 1, 1995   Volume 29, Issue 2 143-144 doi: 10.1136/bjsm.29.2.143
Fletcher J, Davies PT, Lewis T, Campbell MJ.Jockeys accept bony fractures and soft tissue injuries as occupational hazards. An average National Hunt jockey falls once in ten races with an injury rate of 4.25%. Head injury is a common cause of morbidity and the benefit of helmets is well recognized. Neck injuries are also common and usually musculoskeletal. Although rare, trauma to the neck arteries may go unnoticed yet have catastrophic consequences. Internal tears can allow arterial blood to dissect the layers of the arterial wall and obstruct the lumen. Severe obstruction may lead to cerebral ischaemia and infarction. An appreciation ...
Effect of therapeutic horseback riding on posture in children with cerebral palsy.
Physical therapy    October 1, 1988   Volume 68, Issue 10 1505-1512 
Bertoti DB.The purpose of this study was to measure postural changes in children with spastic cerebral palsy after participation in a therapeutic horseback riding program. Eleven children with moderate to severe spastic cerebral palsy, aged 2 years 4 months to 9 years 6 months, were selected for this study and underwent postural assessments according to a repeated-measures design. Assessment of posture was performed by a panel of three pediatric physical therapists, using a postural assessment scale designed by the author. A composite score for each test interval was calculated for each child, and a medi...
Therapeutic strategies involving antimicrobial treatment of the central nervous system in large animals.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 15, 1984   Volume 185, Issue 10 1217-1221 
Brewer BD.No abstract available
The Pennsylvania horseback riding program for cerebral palsy.
American journal of physical medicine    June 1, 1982   Volume 61, Issue 3 141-144 
Haskin M, Bream JA, Erdman WJ.No abstract available
[Motor goals of therapeutic horseback riding for cerebral palsied children (author’s transl)].
Die Rehabilitation    May 1, 1979   Volume 18, Issue 2 56-61 
Feldkamp M.The article reviews in a critical survey the current opinions on the possibilities of improving the motor functions of cerebral palsied children with the help of riding therapy. Furthermore, the essential motor difficulties with spasm, athetosis and ataxia are described. It is demonstrated that only a small number of these typical difficulties can be tackled by means of riding therapy and that some key problems, particularly encountered by the spastics, cannot be solved. If, despite these facts, the favourable effects of riding on the cerebral palsied cannot be denied, then this must be attrib...
[Scientific fundamentals of hippo- and riding therapy – a compilation of study results (author’s transl)].
Die Rehabilitation    February 1, 1978   Volume 17, Issue 1 15-19 
Rieger C.The article surveys some of the scientific fundamentals of hippo- and riding therapy, and its methods using the characteristic horseback three dimensional rhythmic movement impulses for its therapeutic values, particularly in cerebral palsy. The influence of riding on posture and balance reactions, position of the pelvic, postures of head and trunk as well as rotatory movements was demonstrated in film studies using the cerebral palsied with different syndromes as an example. Electromyographic examinations of antagonistic muscle groups, kinesiologic analyses with the help of a video-recorder, ...
[Horseback riding as therapy in children with movement disorders with special reference to cerebral palsy].
Padiatrie und Padologie    January 1, 1978   Volume 13, Issue 4 337-344 
Satter L.No abstract available
[Hippotherapy–a supplementary treatment for motion disturbance caused by cerebral palsy (author’s transl)].
Padiatrie und Padologie    January 1, 1978   Volume 13, Issue 4 405-411 
Tauffkirchen E.Neurodevelopmental treatment according to Dr. K. and B. Bobath can be supplemented by hippotherapy. At proper control and guidance, an improvement in posture tone, inhibition of pathological movement patterns, facilitation of normal automatical reactions and the promotion of sensorimotor perceptions is achieved. By adjustment to the swaying movements of the horse, the child feels how to retain straightening alignment, symmetry and balance. By pleasure in this therapy, the child can be motivated to satisfactory cooperation and accepts the therapy horse as its friend. The results of hippotherapy...
[Hippotherapy and therapeutic horseback riding in the treatment of children and adolescents with cerebral pareses and dysmelias].
ZFA. Zeitschrift fur Allgemeinmedizin    January 10, 1976   Volume 52, Issue 1 15-21 
Horster R, Lippold-von Hörde H, Rieger C.No abstract available
[Letter: Therapeutic value of horseback riding. Comments on riding-therapy in the treatment of cerebral motor disorders].
Das Offentliche Gesundheitswesen    February 1, 1974   Volume 36, Issue 2 130-132 
Rieger C, Eltze J, Ofteringer K, Hengst C.No abstract available
Improvements in muscle symmetry in children with cerebral palsy after equine-assisted therapy (hippotherapy).
   March 15, 2026  
To evaluate the effect of hippotherapy (physical therapy utilizing the movement of a horse) on muscle activity in children with spastic cerebral palsy. Methods: Pretest/post-test control group. Methods: Therapeutic Riding of Tucson (TROT), Tucson, AZ. Methods: Fifteen (15) children ranging from 4 to 12 years of age diagnosed with spastic cerebral palsy. Methods: Children meeting inclusion criteria were randomized to either 8 minutes of hippotherapy or 8 minutes astride a stationary barrel. Methods: Remote surface electromyography (EMG) was used to measure muscle activity of the trunk and upper...