| Literature DB >> 27547509 |
Katharina Stibrant Sunnerhagen1.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Spasticity is a part of the upper motor neuron syndrome and can result in reduced function. Reduction of the complications may be facilitated by early intervention, making identification of stroke patients at high risk for developing spasticity essential. RECENT FINDING: Different predictors of poststroke spasticity (PSS) have been suggested in different studies, including development of increased muscle tone, greater severity of paresis, sensory impairment, and low Barthel Index score. The results also indicate that early identification of factors predictive of PSS is beneficial.Entities:
Keywords: Outcome; PSS; Poststroke spasticity; Review; Risk factors; Stroke rehabilitation
Year: 2016 PMID: 27547509 PMCID: PMC4972859 DOI: 10.1007/s40141-016-0128-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Phys Med Rehabil Rep ISSN: 2167-4833
Poststroke spasticity in patients admitted to a stroke unit
| Study | N | Time after stroke | Evaluation method | Predictors of spasticity | Prevalence of spasticity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Opheim A et al. (2014) | 117 | Up to 12 months | MAS | Reduced sensorimotor function | Spasticity at 3 and 10 days and 4 weeks, 24, 43, and 46 % of. At 12 months, 46 % |
| Reduced sensation | |||||
| Wissel J et al. (2010) | 94 | Up 10 4 months | Modified ashworth scale (Spasticity: MAS > 0) | Moderate increase in muscle tone at baseline and/or first follow-up (MAS = 2), low Barthel Index at baseline, hemispasticity, involvement of more than two joints at first follow-up, and paresis at any assessment point | Spasticity: |
| Urban PP et al. (2010) | 211 | Up to 6 months | Modified ashworth scale (Spasticity: MAS > 0) | More severe paresis in the proximal and distal limb muscles had a higher risk for developing spasticity | 42.6 % had developed spasticity at 6 months. A more severe degree of spasticity (Modified Ashworth Scale > or = 3) was observed in 15.6 % of all patients |
Risk factors significantly predictive of permanent poststroke spasticity [6•]
| Risk factor |
|
|---|---|
| Any paresis in affected limb | <0.001 |
| MAS ≥2 in ≥1 joint within median 6 weeks poststroke | 0.01 |
| >2 joints affected by increased muscle tone | 0.002 |
| Hemispasticity within median 6 weeks poststroke | 0.01 |
| Lower Barthel Index score at baseline | 0.002 |
| More severe paresis at median 16 weeks poststroke | 0.02 |