# Use of TDCS with proprioceptive exercises to improve gait and balance in visually impaired children and preadolescents: a protocol for randomized clinical trial study

**Authors:** Roberta Carneiro de Toledo, Rodolfo Borges Parreira, Deborah Carvalho da Silva Cardoso, Natália de Almeida Carvalho Duarte, Jamile Benite Palma Lopes, Lorraine Barbosa Cordeiro, Daniela Rosana Pedro Fonseca, Iranse Oliveira Silva, Renata Calhes Franco, Karla Cristina Naves de Carvalho, Andrei Machado Viegas da Trindade, Samara Lamounier Santana Parreira, Manuela Galli, Veronica Cimolin, Claudia Santos Oliveira

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fresc.2025.1465846 · Frontiers in Rehabilitation Sciences · 2025-06-05

## TL;DR

This study will test if tDCS combined with proprioceptive exercises improves gait and balance in visually impaired children.

## Contribution

The study introduces a novel protocol combining tDCS with proprioceptive exercises for visually impaired children.

## Key findings

- The study will compare active and sham tDCS with static and dynamic exercises.
- Three-dimensional gait analysis and balance assessments will be used to evaluate outcomes.
- Results may lead to new rehabilitation protocols for visually impaired children.

## Abstract

In the absence of information from the visual system, balance is guided by only two of the three afferent systems. If there is no early stimulation of these systems, blind children tend to become passive, which can have a negative impact on muscle tone, coordination and balance. The aim of the present study protocol is to investigate whether transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) can enhance the effects of static and dynamic proprioceptive exercises on gait and balance control in children and preadolescents with acquired or congenital visual impairment. This randomized controlled trial will be conducted in three phases, starting with a cross-sectional analysis, followed by a pilot study, and concluding with a full-scale clinical trial. The study will be conducted following approval from the institutional review board of Universidade Evangélica de Anápolis, Anápolis, GO, Brazil (certificate number:4610052.6.0000.5076). The study will be divided into three phases. Phase 1 will be a cross-sectional study to characterize gait, postural control and balance (static and dynamic) in the sample. Phase 2 will be a pilot study that will serve to determine the sample size in Phase 3. Both phases 2 and 3 will employ the same methods and will constitute a randomized, controlled, double- blind, clinical trial. The participants will be randomly divided into four groups: (G1) active tDCS + static proprioceptive exercises; (G2) sham tDCS + static proprioceptive exercises; (G3) active tDCS + dynamic proprioceptive exercises; (G4) sham tDCS + dynamic proprioceptive exercises. The results will be based on evaluations performed on three occasions [preintervention, postintervention (after ten treatment sessions) and 1-month follow-up] and will involve three-dimensional gait analysis as well as assessments of functional mobility functional and balance (static and dynamic). The expected outcomes of this study protocol include determining the postural differences, functional mobility, and static balance between children and pre-adolescents with congenital and acquired visual impairment and enable the establishment of new rehabilitation protocols.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** blind (MESH:D001766), congenital and acquired visual impairment (MESH:D014786)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

50 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12176862/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12176862