Literature DB >> 20187878

Reliability of kinematic measures of functional reaching in children with cerebral palsy.

Sheila Schneiberg1, Patricia McKinley, Erika Gisel, Heidi Sveistrup, Mindy F Levin.   

Abstract

AIM: The determination of rehabilitation effectiveness in children with cerebral palsy (CP) depends on the metric properties of the outcome measure. We evaluated the reliability of kinematic measures of functional upper limb reaching movements in children with CP.
METHOD: Thirteen children (ten females, three males) with spastic hemiplegic, diplegic, or quadriplegic CP affecting at least one arm (mean age 9y, SD 1.6y; range 6-11y; Manual Ability Classification System [MACS] levels II-IV) were evaluated three times over 5 weeks. The kinematics of the more affected arm reaching to grasp a 2cm(3) block placed at three distances from the body midline were analysed. The reliability (test-retest) of six kinematic variables (endpoint trajectory straightness and smoothness, trunk displacement, elbow extension, shoulder horizontal adduction, and shoulder flexion] was tested and expressed as intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC, model 2,K) and 95% confidence intervals.
RESULTS: Trajectory smoothness, trunk displacement, elbow extension, and shoulder flexion (far target) had the highest ICCs (0.82-0.95). Other kinematic variables had moderate (0.50< or =ICC< or =0.81) or low (0.17-0.38) reliability. Test-retest reliability was task dependent, as reaches required different degrees of trunk displacement and joint excursion.
INTERPRETATION: Kinematic variables can be used as outcomes in clinical trials to test upper limb intervention effectiveness on motor performance and movement quality. As kinematic variables are task specific, reliability should be interpreted in the context of task requirements.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20187878     DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-8749.2010.03635.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Med Child Neurol        ISSN: 0012-1622            Impact factor:   5.449


  10 in total

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2.  Autistic Children Use Less Efficient Goal-Directed Whole Body Movements Compared to Neurotypical Development.

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Review 5.  Valid and reliable instruments for arm-hand assessment at ICF activity level in persons with hemiplegia: a systematic review.

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6.  Does kinematics add meaningful information to clinical assessment in post-stroke upper limb rehabilitation? A case report.

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7.  The benefits of a comprehensive rehabilitation program in patients diagnosed with spastic quadriplegia.

Authors:  O C Rogoveanu; N C Tuțescu; D Kamal; D O Alexandru; C Kamal; C T Streba; M R Trăistaru
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8.  Characterization of normative hand movements during two functional upper limb tasks.

Authors:  Aïda M Valevicius; Quinn A Boser; Ewen B Lavoie; Glyn S Murgatroyd; Patrick M Pilarski; Craig S Chapman; Albert H Vette; Jacqueline S Hebert
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9.  Psychometric properties of upper limb kinematics during functional tasks in children and adolescents with dyskinetic cerebral palsy.

Authors:  Inti Vanmechelen; Saranda Bekteshi; Marco Konings; Hilde Feys; Kaat Desloovere; Jean-Marie Aerts; Elegast Monbaliu
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10.  Timing training in three children with diplegic cerebral palsy: short- and long-term effects on upper-limb movement organization and functioning.

Authors:  Anna-Maria Johansson; Erik Domellöf; Louise Rönnqvist
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  10 in total

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