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Intramuscular injection of collagenase clostridium histolyticum may decrease spastic muscle contracture for children with cerebral palsy.

Medical Hypotheses 2019 January
In cerebral palsy (CP), the spastic motor type is most common, associated with a velocity-dependent increase in muscle stiffness that precedes the development of fixed muscle contracture - a permanent shortening of the muscle tendon unit even when relaxed. Intra-muscular injections of botulinum toxin type A (BTX-A) have become popular for the treatment of spastic muscle contractures but unfortunately its use has not resulted in long-term functional benefits and, paradoxically, has been associated with a persistent loss of contractile material. Recent biomechanical work has shown that the stiffness of the CP muscle increases in proportion to total collagen content within the perimysial extra-cellular matrix. Thus, rather than the use of tone-reducing agents, we hypothesize that the focal use of a selective collagenase, injected into spastic muscle at an appropriate dilution and concentration, may serve to reduce the extent of muscle contracture, improving clinical range of motion and perhaps sarcomere length.

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