| Literature DB >> 28733271 |
Alessandro Peretti1, Francesco Amenta1, Seyed Khosrow Tayebati1, Giulio Nittari1, Syed Sarosh Mahdi1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Telemedicine applications have been increasing due to the development of new computer science technologies and of more advanced telemedical devices. Various types of telerehabilitation treatments and their relative intensities and duration have been reported.Entities:
Keywords: health care; rehabilitation; remote rehabilitation assistance; telemedicine; telerehabilitation
Year: 2017 PMID: 28733271 PMCID: PMC5544892 DOI: 10.2196/rehab.7511
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Rehabil Assist Technol ISSN: 2369-2529
Figure 1Number of patients treated from 1998 to 2008 through telerehabilitation techniques.
Figure 2Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) flowchart.
Characteristics of studies on telerehabilitation reviewed.
| First author, date, reference | Type of article | Rehabilitation area | Sample size | Article key points | Positive aspects | Barriers and limitations |
| Ackerman, 2010 [ | Original research | Multiple rehabilitation areas | Literature review | Next-generation telehealth tools | Devices are available at home; electronic health record available for each person; interaction of multiple systems. | People and technological systems are not ready (data flow and incompatibility between telerehabilitation systems). |
| Rogante, 2010 [ | Review article | Multiple rehabilitation areas | Literature review | Overview of telerehabilitation literature | Provides some techniques at a distance. | Health care providers are not ready; comprehensive studies are lacking. |
| Zampolini, 2008 [ | Review article | Multiple rehabilitation areas | Literature review | Overview of telerehabilitation literature and a study | The possibilities of using telerehabilitation as standard in the future. | Technologies, patients, and health care providers are not ready. |
| Carey, 2007 [ | Original research | Physiotherapy | Literature review | Cortical reorganization after stroke | Telerehabilitation may be effective in improving performance in patients with chronic stroke. | No clear advantage produced over the same amount of practice of random movements. |
| Parmanto, 2008 [ | Review article | Multiple rehabilitation areas | Literature review | Telerehabilitation from informatics perspective | Information technology and telerehabilitation are the future. | Health care providers are not ready to manage an everyday telerehabilitation approach. |
| Mani, 2016 [ | Review article | Physiotherapy | Literature review | Telerehabilitation in musculoskeletal disorders | Telerehabilitation-based physiotherapy assessment is technically feasible. | Telerehabilitation-based physiotherapy assessment was not feasible or reliable for lumbar spine posture, orthopedic special tests, neurodynamic tests, and scar assessment. |
| Gal, 2015 [ | Original research | Physiotherapy | Literature review | Kinect-based system in physiotherapy | Kinect can greatly help people in rehabilitation. | Not present. |
| Jagos, 2015 [ | Clinical trial | Cardiac rehabilitation | 5 patients | Rehabilitation after stroke | The system used could be used for further analysis. | Not present. |
| Keshner, 2007 [ | Original research | Multiple rehabilitation areas | Literature review | VRaas a treatment intervention | VR should be used more in the future. | People are not ready. |
| Larson, 2014 [ | Review article | Multiple rehabilitation areas | Literature review | VR treatment | VR is effectively used for telerehabilitation. | Further studies are needed to optimize the techniques. |
| Kenyon, 2004 [ | Review article | Multiple rehabilitation areas | Literature review | VR treatment | The virtual environment can be a valuable tool for therapeutic interventions that require adaptation to complex, multimodal environments. | Not present. |
| Lewis, 1997 [ | Review article | Multiple rehabilitation areas | Literature review | VR treatment and human factors | VR has many potentialities in health care. | Some users experienced adverse effects during and after exposure to VR environments (ocular problems, disorientation and balance disturbances, and nausea). |
| Burdea, 2013 [ | Case study | Physiotherapy and neurological rehabilitation | Literature review | Cerebral palsy motor control improvement | Game-based robotic training of the ankle benefits gait in children with cerebral palsy. | Additional studies are needed to quantify the level of benefit and for comparing different approaches. |
| Busch, 2009 [ | Clinical trial | Cardiac rehabilitation | 4 patients | Electrocardiography, blood pressure, and oxygen saturation in cardiac patients | The system shown is acceptable. | Electrocardiogram connection (27%) and blood pressure reading problems (23%); more reliability is needed. |
| Dinesen, 2012 [ | Case study | Multiple rehabilitation areas | 60 patients | Telehealth in pulmonary disease patients | Not present. | Future work requires large-scale studies of prolonged home monitoring with more extended follow-up. |
| Giansanti, 2013 [ | Original research | Multiple rehabilitation areas | Literature review | Validation of a portable care system | Very low costs compared with optoelectronic solutions and other portable solutions; very high accuracy, also for patients with imbalance problems; good compatibility with any rehabilitative tool. | Not present. |
| Kairy, 2016 [ | Clinical trial | Physiotherapy | 104 patients | Upper limb through VR | This approach can enhance continuity of care once patients are discharged from rehabilitation. | Not present. |
| Myers, 2003 [ | Original research | Cardiac rehabilitation | Literature review | Cardiology overview | Not present. | Not present. |
| Piotrowicz, 2012 [ | Clinical trial | Cardiac rehabilitation | 75 patients | Home-based cardiac rehabilitation in heart failure patients | The system used is reliable. | Further studies are required. |
| Fletcher, 2001 [ | Original research | Cardiac rehabilitation | Literature review | Exercise standards for testing and training | Not present. | Not present. |
| Piotrowicz, 2010 [ | Clinical trial | Cardiac rehabilitation | 152 patients | Home-based telemonitoring system | The system is effective and usable. | Not present. |
| Rose, 2005 [ | Review article | Neurological rehabilitation | Literature review | VR in brain damage | VR has the potential to assist current rehabilitation techniques and will be an integral part of cognitive assessment and rehabilitation in the future. | Brain damage rehabilitation is still a relatively undeveloped field. |
| Satava, 1995 [ | Original research | Multiple rehabilitation areas | Literature review | VR | Not present. | Not present. |
| Rizzo, 2005 [ | Original research | Neurological rehabilitation | Literature review | VR, brain, and therapy | VR has many potentialities in medicine. | VR rehabilitation is still in an early phase of development characterized by successful proof of concept. |
| Linder, 2015 [ | Clinical Trial | Neurological rehabilitation | 99 patients | Improving quality of life and depression after stroke | A robot-assisted intervention may be a valuable approach for improving quality of life. | Not present. |
| Holst, 2017 [ | Original research | Neurological rehabilitation | Literature review | Depression treatment | Internet-mediated cognitive behavioral therapy is an attractive alternative for some, but not all, patients with depression in primary care. | Lack of face-to-face meeting and human contact. |
| Vaughan, 2016 [ | Review article | Neurological rehabilitation | Literature review | State-of-the-art of VR | VR could be used to treat neurological patients. | Not present. |
aVR: virtual reality.