EFFECT OF MOTOR SENSORY TRAINING WITH ADDITIONAL SENSORY INFORMATION ON THE FUNCTIONALITY OF WOMEN WITH KNEE OSTEOARTHRITIS: RANDOMIZED, BLIND, CLINICAL TRIAL.
1- Osteoarthritis.2- Motor Activity. 3- Sensory feedback.
INTRODUCTION: Osororesthritis (OA) is a chronic degenerative and multifactorial disease that occurs in the articular joint and is closely linked to the process of execution, especially the knee joint. Heiye's OA tags have been related to the weakness of the heart quadriceps associated with proprioceptive paddy. Further research has improved proprioceptive acuity and the anteciopteratory muscular response of this population. To the over popula- tion and considering progredive progressive disease, gering to judicially judicament for the commode patients for patients, the relevant avenue forms of treatment that maintain an architectural from populational. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the use of additional sensory information in a motor sensory training program on a feature of women with knee OA. METHODOLOGY: This is a randomized clinical trial, conducted with women diagnosed with OA knee. The volunteers will be randomized into three intervention groups: G1 - Control group; G2 - Sensory motor training group and G3 - Sensory motor training group plus additional sensory information, being evaluated pre and post intervention protocols. They will be evaluated for pain (EVA), strength (portable dynamics), balance (right foot balance scale), function (WOMAC), functional capacity (TC6 and TUG test) and quality of life (WHOQOL-OLD). A redressing analysis of Shapiro Wilk. For the test to be used together, the test will be used for the test of paired samples that will be checked in the normality assumption, otherwise the nonparametric alternative Wilcoxon test.