| Literature DB >> 26202325 |
Peter Feys1, Karin Coninx2, Lore Kerkhofs3, Tom De Weyer4, Veronik Truyens5, Anneleen Maris6, Ilse Lamers7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite the functional impact of upper limb dysfunction in multiple sclerosis (MS), effects of intensive exercise programs and specifically robot-supported training have been rarely investigated in persons with advanced MS. AIM: To investigate the effects of additional robot-supported upper limb training in persons with MS compared to conventional treatment only.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26202325 PMCID: PMC4511982 DOI: 10.1186/s12984-015-0043-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroeng Rehabil ISSN: 1743-0003 Impact factor: 4.262
Fig. 1CONSORT flowchart
Fig. 2Hardware set-up, including a haptic robot, sling and visual display
Fig. 3Example of basic motor function exercise ‘reach’ (a) and ‘pull’ (b). Participants have to reach or pull the disk towards the target. Visual feedback on the correctness of the executed trajectory is provided by colour changes of the disk (green, orange, red). During pulling, subjects experience resistance on, or are pulled to, the trajectory
Fig. 4Serious games a ‘Watering the flowers’ and b ‘Chicken run’. a In ‘watering the flowers’, the skill components lifting, transporting and pro/supination are performed while filling a glass with coloured fertilizer and watering the flowers with the matching colour. b ‘Chicken run’ addresses transporting, reaching, pushing and retrieval while collecting eggs and bringing them to the egg-cup. Subjects are prompted to collect as much points as possible in a particular time frame while avoiding distractors
Clinical characteristics of the MS intervention and MS control group
| Subject | EDSS | Age | Sex (F/M) | Type of MS | Disease duration (yrs) | Wheelchair-bound | Current hand dominance | Arm trained |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MS Experimental group | ||||||||
| 1 | 8.5 | 65 | F | SP | 25 | Yes | Right | Right |
| 2 | 8.0 | 57 | M | SP | 27 | Yes | Right | Left |
| 3 | 8.0 | 75 | M | SP | 10 | Yes | Right | Right |
| 4 | 8.0 | 64 | M | PP | 14 | Yes | Left | Left |
| 5 | 8.0 | 56 | M | SP | 26 | Yes | Right | Right |
| 6 | 8.5 | 55 | M | SP | 27 | Yes | Right | Left |
| 7 | 3.5 | 58 | F | SP | 3 | No | Right | Left |
| 8 | 8.0 | 72 | M | SP | 34 | Yes | Left | Left |
| 9 | 7.0 | 47 | F | RR | 24 | Yes | Right | Left |
| Median | 8 | 58 | 25 | |||||
| IQR | 8-8 | 56–65 | 14–27 | |||||
| MS Control group | ||||||||
| 1 | 7.0 | 59 | M | SP | 18 | Yes | Left | Right |
| 2 | 7.5 | 46 | F | SP | 10 | Yes | Right | Left |
| 3 | 7.0 | 50 | M | SP | 8 | Yes | Right | Left |
| 4 | 8.0 | 52 | F | SP | 14 | Yes | Right | Right |
| 5 | 8.0 | 49 | F | SP | 23 | Yes | Right | Right |
| 6 | 3.5 | 48 | F | SP | 5 | No | Right | Left |
| 7 | 6.5 | 62 | M | SP | 21 | No | Right | Left |
| 8 | 7.5 | 59 | M | PP | / | No | Right | Right |
| Median | 7.3 | 61 | 14 | |||||
| IQR | 6.9–7.6 | 47–75 | 9–19.5 | |||||
| p |
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Values reported are median and interquartile range, or number; p= p-value chi square test for nominal/ ordinal data or Mann-Whitney U Test for continous data to compare groups yrs years, F female, M male, SP secondary progressive MS, RR relapsing remitting MS; PP primary progressive MS
Experimental clinical outcome measures (median [interquartile range]) at baseline and 8 weeks for both the intervention and control group
| Intervention group ( | Control group ( | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre | Post | ∆ | p | Pre | Post | ∆ | p | ||
| Motricity Index, 0–100 | 72.0 [59.0–76.0] | 64.0 [60.0–83.0] | −8 | ns | 66.0 [50.8–70.5] | 59.5 [46.3–77.8] | −6.5 | ns | |
| Hand grip strength (kg) | 21.3 [12.0–23.3] | 21.0 [10.7–23.3] | −0.3 | ns | 16.3 [11.7–19.5] | 17.0 [11.3–19.0] | 0.7 | ns | |
| Fugl Meyer, 0–66 | 52.0 [43.0–62.0] | 52.0 [43.0–63.0] | 0 | ns | 55.0 [40.0–57.5] | 56.0 [40.0–59.0] | 1 | ns | |
| Distal score, 0–24 | 20.0 [17.0–23.0] | 19.0 [18.0–23.0] | −1 | ns | 19.5 [16.5–21.8] | 20.0 [16.8–21.8] | 0.5 | ns | |
| Proximal score, 0–42 | 33.0 [27.0–38.0] | 32.0 [25.0–39.0] | −1 | ns | 33.0 [25.0–36.5] | 34.0 [25.0–36.5] | 1 | ns | |
| Action Research Arm test , 0–57 | 40.0 [20.0–41.0] | 38.0 [27.0–47.0] | −2 | ns | 36.0 [28.5–41.0] | 35.0 [27.5–44.0] | −1 | ns | |
| Motor Activity Log, 0–10 | 5.3 [2.1–8] | 5.2 [4.3–7.1] | −0.1 | ns | 2.1 [1.5–4.7] | 2.0 [0.7–5.1] | −0.1 | ns | |
| Amount of use, 0-5 | 3.0 [1.2–3.8] | 3.0 [2.5–3.5] | 0 | ns | 1.2 [0.9–2.5] | 1.0 [0.5–2.6] | −0.2 | ns | |
| Quality of movement, 0-5 | 2.3 [1.0–4.0] | 2.4 [1.8–2.9] | 0.1 | ns | 0.9 [0.7–2.1] | 0.9 [0.3–2.4] | 0 | ns | |
Values reported are median and [interquartile range]; p = p-values, Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test. For all outcome measures, a higher score indicates a better upper limb performance. A positive delta indicates an improvement of the score after training compared to baseline and vice versa for a negative sign
Fig. 5Proximal (a), distal (b) and total (c) FM score and Motricity Index (d) for subjects 2 and 7, pre- and post-I-TRAVLE training
Experimental robotic outcome measures in the MS intervention group during transporting, reaching and lifting
| Median Pre [Q1–Q3] | Median Post [Q1–Q3] | ∆ |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Transporting (Left-Right) | ROM (m) | 0.666 [0.512–0.709] | 0.622 [0.513–0.745] | −0.044 | ns |
| Duration (s) | 8.459 [5.955–21.324] | 6.853 [5.957–7.044] | −1.606 | 0.043* | |
| Speed (m/s) | 0.163 [0.146–0.170] | 0.206 [0.177–0.237] | 0.043 | 0.018* | |
| HPR | 1.554 [1.388–3.413] | 1.088 [0.978–1.451] | −0.466 | 0.017* | |
| Distance (m) | 1.304 [0.904–2.878] | 1.307 [1.196–1.382] | 0.003 | ns | |
| Reaching (Front-Back) | ROM (m) | 0.375 [0.302–0.406] | 0.405 [0.314–0.407] | 0.030 | ns |
| Duration (s) | 7.575 [4.372–12.540] | 5.802 [4.106–6.842] | −1.773 | 0.063** | |
| Speed (m/s) | 0.103 [0.072–0.175] | 0.146 [0.120–0.177] | 0.043 | ns | |
| HPR | 2.114 [1.850–2.708] | 1.894 [1.877–2.300] | −0.220 | 0.091** | |
| Distance (m) | 0.782 [0.687–0.936] | 0.848 [0.656–0.905] | 0.066 | ns | |
| Lifting (Up-Down) | ROM (m) | 0.436 [0.436–0.436] | 0.436 [0.411–0.436] | 0.000 | ns |
| Duration (s) | 9.137 [6.141–10.804] | 6.319 [3.268–9.106] | −2.818 | 0.008* | |
| Speed (m/s) | 0.128 [0.083–0.167] | 0.152 [0.104–0.214] | 0.024 | 0.051** | |
| HPR | 1.639 [1.572–2.863] | 1.668 [1.448–2.244] | 0.029 | ns | |
| Distance (m) | 0.810 [0.776–1.414] | 0.810 [0.715–1.032] | 0.000 | ns |
Values reported are median and [interquartile range]
HPR hand path ratio, m meters, s seconds, m/s meter per second, ns not significant
*significant Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test < 0.05; ** trend towards significance 0.05 < p < 0.1
Fig. 6Movement duration of transporting exercise and hand path ratio of the reaching exercise for subjects 2 and 7, pre- and post- I-TRAVLE training. Movement duration is expressed in seconds while the Hand Path Ratio is the real distance covered between the two goals divided by the shortest distance between the goals