Journal of International Medical Research (Mar 2021)
Comparing soleus injections and gastrocnemius injections of botulinum toxin for treating adult spastic foot drop: a monocentric observational study
Abstract
Objective Outcome differences between selective abobotulinumtoxin type A (aboBoNT/A) injections into the soleus (SOL) and gastrocnemius (GAS) muscles were investigated in post-stroke patients with spastic foot drop. Methods A monocentric observational study was conducted at a university hospital botulinum toxin clinic including 24 free-walking adult, botulinum toxin-naive patients with post-stroke hemiplegia. AboBoNT/A (800 MU in 4 mL saline) was injected into the SOL or GAS muscle under electromyographic guidance. After 30 days post-injection, the effect of aboBoNT/A injection was assessed by patients. The treating physician scored spasticity and measured angles at the knee and ankle joint and gait speed. Results After 30 days, significant improvements of subjective and objective outcome measures were observed. No significant difference was observed in the modified Ashworth scale, gait speed, ankle and knee angles, or their angle combinations between the SOL and GAS groups. Tendencies toward greater active range of motion (RoM) improvement in the SOL group and passive RoM improvement in the GAS group were observed. The difference between active and passive ankle extensions plus knee flexions was significantly larger in the SOL group. Conclusions Selective 800 MU aboBoNT/A injections into the SOL or GAS muscle were effective but without relevant clinical difference.