| Literature DB >> 28659156 |
Leigh Ann Mrotek1,2, Maria Bengtson3, Tina Stoeckmann4, Lior Botzer3, Claude P Ghez5, John McGuire6, Robert A Scheidt3,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We examined the validity and reliability of a short robotic test of upper limb proprioception, the Arm Movement Detection (AMD) test, which yields a ratio-scaled, objective outcome measure to be used for evaluating the impact of sensory deficits on impairments of motor control, motor adaptation and functional recovery in stroke survivors.Entities:
Keywords: Aging; Displacement; Force; Proprioception; Stroke; Threshold; Uncertainty
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28659156 PMCID: PMC5490232 DOI: 10.1186/s12984-017-0269-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroeng Rehabil ISSN: 1743-0003 Impact factor: 4.262
Hemiparetic stroke survivor demographic data
| ID | Status | Handle | Age | Sex | Years post-stroke | Lesion | Test side | MoCA | FMM | FMprop. | FMLT | MASc | PAS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 101 | HSS-P | Cylinder | 57 | M | 12 | I/SC | L | 27 | 27 | 2S, 1E, 0W, 0T | 2 | 0.38 | 0.49 ± 0.22 |
| 107 | HSS-P | Cylinder | 61 | M | 12 | I/C | R | 10b | 27 | 1S, 1E, 0W, 0T | 2 | 1.0 | 1.30 ± 0.44 |
| 108a | HSS-P | Plane | 61 | M | 9 | I/C | L | 28 | 9 | 2S, 2E, 0W, 1T | 2 | 1.13 | 0.48 ± 0.39 |
| 106 | HSS-P | Cylinder | 64 | F | 24 | */* | R | 14b | 45 | 2S, 1E, 1W, 0T | 1 | 0.75 | 0.95 ± 0.43 |
| 105 | HSS-P | Sphere | 61 | M | 9 | I/SC | R | 25 | 66 | 1S, 1E, 1W, 1T | 2 | 0 | 0.75 ± 0.06 |
| 112a | HSS-P | Cylinder | 34 | M | 6 | H/* | L | 27 | 21 | 2S, 2E, 1W, 0T | 1 | 1.63 | 0.85 ± 0.21 |
| 113 | HSS-P | Cylinder | 63 | F | 10 | */* | L | 22 | 37 | 2S, 2E, 1W, 0T | 2 | 1.38 | 0.33 ± 0.11 |
| 102 | HSS + P | Cylinder | 59 | M | 7 | I/SC | R | 26b | 20 | 2S, 2E, 2W, 2T | 4 | 1.5 | 0.51 ± 0.05 |
| 104 | HSS + P | Cylinder | 52 | M | 13 | */* | R | 23b | 21 | 2S, 2E, 2W, 2T | 2 | 1.38 | 0.45 ± 0.11 |
| 103a | HSS + P | Cylinder | 64 | F | 29 | */* | L | 26 | 30 | 2S, 2E, 2W, 2T | 4 | 2.75 | 0.28 ± 0.07 |
| 110 | HSS + P | Sphere | 62 | M | 7 | I/SC | L | 23 | 41 | 2S, 2E, 2W, 2T | 4 | 1.63 | 0.46 ± 0.13 |
| 111 | HSS + P | Sphere | 69 | F | 35 | H/B | R | 25 | 23 | 2S, 2E, 2W, 2T | 4 | 0.75 | 0.43 ± 0.06 |
| 114 | HSS + P | Sphere | 64 | M | 7 | I/SC | L | 24 | 66 | 2S, 2E, 2W, 2T | 4 | 0 | 0.35 ± 0.18 |
| 115 | HSS + P | Cylinder | 70 | F | 13 | H/* | L | 22 | 32 | 2S, 2E, 2W, 2T | 4 | 0.375 | 0.42 ± 0.08 |
Abbreviations: ID patient identifier, HSS-P hemiparetic stroke survivor with impaired proprioception, HSS + P hemiparetic stroke survivor with intact proprioception, M male, F female, Lesion{type/location} - I ischemic, H hemorrhagic, C cortical, SC subcortical, B brainstem, Test Side - L left, R right, MoCA montreal cognitive assessment score, FM motor portion of the Fugl-Meyer Assessment, FM proprioceptive component of the sensory portion of the Fugl-Meyer Assessment, S shoulder, E elbow, W wrist, T thumb, FM light touch component of the sensory portion of the Fugl-Meyer Assessment, C-13 the chedoke McMaster Arm and Hand Inventory - 13-element version, MAS modified ashworth scale, PAS proprioceptive acuity score (see Methods for computational details)
*Information unavailable
aParticipants received botulinum neurotoxin treatment within three months prior to testing
bParticipant has expressive aphasia
cMAS score was computed by averaging the individual MAS scores for Elbow flexion & extension and shoulder abduction & adduction
Fig. 1Experiment Setup. a Participants sat in a high backed chair with shoulder, arm and hand supported and hidden from view. The hand was mechanically coupled to the handle of a horizontal planar robot. Participants were instructed to relax the arm at all times during the experiment. The robot perturbed the hand with forces that followed a complex sum-of-sinusoids pattern during each 60 s trial. The experimenter adjusted force magnitude based on the participant’s verbal responses to questions designed to identify the psychophysical threshold of movement detection. b Hand forces applied in the x-direction (top) and y-direction (bottom) for the first five cycles of the slowest component of the sum-of-sinusoids perturbation. c Corresponding XY forces applied during the same five cycles for a neurologically intact control participant
Fig. 2Evolution of hand forces during a typical descending trial, as performed by a neurologically intact control participant. a Force magnitude as a function of time for a single trial. b and c A comparison of hand forces and motions from the initial (red) and later (grey) parts of the trial. The thin black circular line represents a scale of 1 N or 1 cm (respectively) for each trace
Fig. 3Hand force time series for selected participants. a Neurologically intact control participant (NIC). The bolded trial in the NIC plot is the same as shown in Fig. 2. b Hemiparetic Stroke Survivor with intact proprioception (HSS + P). c Hemiparetic Stroke Survivor with impaired proprioception (HSS-P). Each panel depicts the magnitude of force [N] applied to the participant’s hand as a function of time in each 60-s trial. The across-trials mean and standard deviation values of the final force magnitudes are graphically depicted on the far right side of each panel. Insets: Hand path displacements during the last five full cycles of the slowest component of the force perturbation, as measured during the bolded trial in the main panel
Fig. 4Primary experimental findings. a Plot showing the variability (i.e., standard deviation V; units: [N]) of the threshold plotted vs. mean threshold (TH; units: [N]). neurologically intact control group (NIC); hemiparetic stroke survivors with intact proprioception (HSS+P); hemiparetic stroke survivors without intact proprioception (HSS-P). The NIC participants are represented by circles and subdivided into four groups based on age: blue circles are younger participants (n = 9; age range: 18–31 year; 24 ± 5 year), green circles are the middle-young participants (n = 6; age range 36–49 year; 42 ± 5 year), red circles are the middle-old participants (n = 5; age range 55–63 year; 60 ± 3 year), and purple circles are the older participants (n = 5; age range 70–87 year; 80 ± 7 year). The HSS+P group is represented by gray triangles pointing up and the HSS-P group is represented by black triangles pointing down. Each group has one “hollow” marker denoting that those participants’ data are represented in Fig. 3. Iso-likelihood lines show several difference confidence bounds for likelihood of normal proprioceptive sensation. The darkest line is the 0.01% iso-likelihood line (chance of missing a participant who has normal proprioception), the next line is the 0.1% then 1.0%, 5%, and 25%. b Group average Proprioceptive Acuity Score (PAS) with group error bars (± 1 SEM). Scores for the NIC, HSS+P and HSS-P groups. PAS is a measure of the distance of a point from “normal” performance, as defined using NIC performance data (see Methods). Red bars indicate that the members of the HSS-P group had significantly greater PAS than the members of the other two groups
Fig. 5Mean detection threshold (TH) vs. age for the NIC participants. There is a slight but significant increase in the threshold with increasing age (TH = 0.090 + 0.003*Age). Blue circles: younger; Green: middle-young; Red: middle-old; Purple: older