Literature DB >> 17082499

Recovery of grasp versus reach in people with hemiparesis poststroke.

Catherine E Lang1, Joanne M Wagner, Dorothy F Edwards, Shirley A Sahrmann, Alexander W Dromerick.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND
OBJECTIVE: The authors recently found that grasping was not relatively more disrupted than reaching in people with acute hemiparesis. They now extend this work to the recovery of reach versus grasp.
METHODS: Hemiparetic subjects were tested acutely, after 90 days, and then after 1 year poststroke, and a control group was evaluated once. Using kinematic techniques, subjects were studied performing reach and reach-to-grasp movements. The authors quantified 3 characteristics of performance for each movement: speed, accuracy, and efficiency, where an efficient movement was defined as a movement directly to the target without extraneous or abnormally circuitous movements. To evaluate the relative deficits and recovery in reach versus grasp, performance measures were converted to z scores using control group means and standard deviations.
RESULTS: The authors' results showed that, starting with small deficits in speed acutely, both reach speed and grasp speed improved over time. Deficits in accuracy were greater in the reach than the grasp acutely, and these deficits lessened such that by the 90-day time point, the relative accuracy of the 2 movements was the same. In contrast, deficits in efficiency were greater in the grasp than the reach acutely, and grasp efficiency did not recover. The majority of recovery in reaching and grasping occurred by the 90-day time point, with little change occurring between the 90-day and 1-year time points.
CONCLUSIONS: The authors hypothesize that, in chronic hemiparesis, purposeful movements requiring distal control may be more impaired than purposeful movements requiring proximal control, not because of the initial lesion, but because, over the course of recovery, spared components of the descending motor systems may be able to compensate for the accuracy deficits in reaching (proximal control) but not the efficiency deficits in grasping (distal muscular control).

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2006        PMID: 17082499     DOI: 10.1177/1545968306289299

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurorehabil Neural Repair        ISSN: 1545-9683            Impact factor:   3.919


  25 in total

1.  Compensatory motor control after stroke: an alternative joint strategy for object-dependent shaping of hand posture.

Authors:  Preeti Raghavan; Marco Santello; Andrew M Gordon; John W Krakauer
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2010-03-24       Impact factor: 2.714

2.  Need for speed: better movement quality during faster task performance after stroke.

Authors:  Stacey L DeJong; Sydney Y Schaefer; Catherine E Lang
Journal:  Neurorehabil Neural Repair       Date:  2011-12-02       Impact factor: 3.919

3.  Integrated versus isolated training of the hemiparetic upper extremity in haptically rendered virtual environments.

Authors:  Qinyin Qiu; Gerard G Fluet; Soha Saleh; Ian Lafond; Alma S Merians; Sergei V Adamovich
Journal:  Annu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc       Date:  2010

4.  Exploring the impact of visual and movement based priming on a motor intervention in the acute phase post-stroke in persons with severe hemiparesis of the upper extremity.

Authors:  Jigna Patel; Qinyin Qiu; Mathew Yarossi; Alma Merians; Supriya Massood; Eugene Tunik; Sergei Adamovich; Gerard Fluet
Journal:  Disabil Rehabil       Date:  2016-09-16       Impact factor: 3.033

Review 5.  Motor compensation and its effects on neural reorganization after stroke.

Authors:  Theresa A Jones
Journal:  Nat Rev Neurosci       Date:  2017-03-23       Impact factor: 34.870

6.  Neurons in Primary Motor Cortex Encode Hand Orientation in a Reach-to-Grasp Task.

Authors:  Chaolin Ma; Xuan Ma; Jing Fan; Jiping He
Journal:  Neurosci Bull       Date:  2017-04-07       Impact factor: 5.203

7.  Involuntary paretic wrist/finger flexion forces and EMG increase with shoulder abduction load in individuals with chronic stroke.

Authors:  Laura C Miller; Julius P A Dewald
Journal:  Clin Neurophysiol       Date:  2012-02-22       Impact factor: 3.708

8.  Forelimb Cortical Stroke Reduces Precision of Motor Control in Mice.

Authors:  April M Becker; Dene M Betz; Mark P Goldberg
Journal:  Neurorehabil Neural Repair       Date:  2020-05-20       Impact factor: 3.919

9.  Motor skill changes and neurophysiologic adaptation to recovery-oriented virtual rehabilitation of hand function in a person with subacute stroke: a case study.

Authors:  Gerard G Fluet; Jigna Patel; Qinyin Qiu; Matthew Yarossi; Supriya Massood; Sergei V Adamovich; Eugene Tunik; Alma S Merians
Journal:  Disabil Rehabil       Date:  2016-09-27       Impact factor: 3.033

10.  Recovery of thumb and finger extension and its relation to grasp performance after stroke.

Authors:  Catherine E Lang; Stacey L DeJong; Justin A Beebe
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2009-05-20       Impact factor: 2.714

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