| Literature DB >> 30547807 |
Lorenzo Garavaglia1, Emanuela Pagliano2, Giovanni Baranello2, Simone Pittaccio3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Movement Disorders (MD) are a class of disease that impair the daily activities of patients, conditioning their sensorimotor, cognitive and behavioural capabilities. Nowadays, the general management of patients with MD is based on rehabilitation, pharmacological treatments, surgery, and traditional splints. Although some attempts have been made to devise specific orthoses for the rehabilitation of patients affected by MD, especially the younger ones, those devices have received limited attention. MAIN BODY: This paper will principally discuss the case of upper limb rehabilitation in Childhood Dyskinesia (CD), a complex motor disease that affects paediatric patients. Through a critical review of the present solutions and a discussion about the neurophysiological characteristics of the disease, the study will lead to the formulation of desirable features of a possible new upper-limb orthosis.Entities:
Keywords: Dynamic orthosis; Dyskinesia; Dystonia; Functional materials; Movement Disorders; Neurophysiological models; Rehabilitation
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30547807 PMCID: PMC6295089 DOI: 10.1186/s12984-018-0466-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroeng Rehabil ISSN: 1743-0003 Impact factor: 4.262
casting and rigid orthoses
| Type of publication | Aims and summary | Approach and Sample size | Conclusions | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scientific paper | Studying the effect of intensive neurodevelopmental therapy (NDT) and upper-extremity inhibitive casting, separately or in combination, on hand function, quality of upper-extremity movement and range of motion. | Clinical study. | There was no significant difference between intensive or regular therapy and casting or no casting for hand function, between intensive and regular NDT, or between intensive NDT plus casting and the other groups for quality of movement and range of motion. Casting led to increased quality of movement and wrist extension after 6 months. Casting with NDT improved the quality of upper-extremity movement and range of motion. There appear to be no immediate benefits from intensive therapy alone. | [ |
| Scientific paper | Studying the effect of neurodevelopmental therapy (NDT) and upper-extremity inhibitive casting, separately or in combination, with occupational therapy (OT), on hand function. | Clinical study. | Analysis of the outcomes revealed no significant differences in hand function, quality of upper-extremity movement, or parents’ perception of hand-function performance between the two treatment groups. There does not appear to be any beneficial effect of an increased amount of therapy for the children in this study. | [ |
| Scientific review | Reviewing the treatment of hyperkinetic movement disorders. In describing different approaches to the treatment of various movement disorders, the paper includes a statement about casting for dystonia. | Review of the literature. | Immobilisation can actually exacerbate or even precipitate dystonia, as is the case in peripherally induced dystonia. | [ |
| Book chapter | Describing different devices employed especially to avoid deformities, block the function, and prevent the beginning of the chain created as a functional pattern. | Summary of rehabilitation strategies for dystonia in children. | Traditional splints or rigid orthoses, made of relatively thick thermoplastic, can provide rigidity, position and stretch the muscles in patients with increased muscle tone. To provide some positive effects, the devices should be designed for each patient, due to the particular needs required by every clinical picture. | [ |
| Scientific review | Reviewing the evidence on the effectiveness of using upper and lower limb casting or orthoses in children with cerebral palsy. | Review of the literature. | Further investigation are needed to prove some positive effects, the devices should be designed for each patient, due to the particular needs required by every clinical picture. | [ |
| Scientific paper | Evaluating modification in writing ability by immobilisation in patients with hand dystonia. Static hand orthosis was used to support and immobilise the segments of the hand interfering with writing (thumb, fingers, or wrist), and allowing the proximal large muscles to control the writing movements (Fig. 1). | Clinical single-cases study. | Results demonstrated an improvement in writing ability of patients while using the hand orthosis. Authors recommend the application of the hand orthosis in association with other therapies to overcome a disability that handicaps the patient’s daily life and vocation. | [ |
| Scientific paper | Evaluating the combined use of an orthosis and occupational therapy. | Clinical study. | Wearing the elbow immobiliser during the application of occupational therapy program has a potential benefits to improve the hand function athetoid CP patients, through controlling the involuntary movement and allowing good performance during fine motor training for longer time and in an effective way. The significant improvement noticed in hand function in the study group vs. controls (that only did the occupational routine) may be due to reduced distal involuntary movement obtained by wearing the elbow immobiliser during training of fine motor skills. | [ |
| Scientific paper | Evaluation of a hand splint. | Clinical single-cases study. | Immobilising the unaffected limb can help exercise more the impaired limb Positive results in 3 out of 5 musicians with focal hand dystonia after such kind of therapy. | [ |
| Scientific review | Reviewing the effects of constraint-induced therapy. Constraint-induced movement therapy has been applied during the rehabilitation of patients with spasticity after stroke to limit non-dystonic segments and to exercise the affected ones. | Review of the literature. | Unclear benefit using constraint-induced therapy, in the treatment of dystonia. | [ |
| Scientific paper | Evaluating the effect of movement restriction in cerebral palsy. The research hypothesis was that restriction of the less-involved hand with a resting splint would result in increased use of the more-involved hand in a child with spastic cerebral palsy. | Clinical single-cases study. | An improvement in quality, quantity, and variety of use of the more-involved extremity after splinting, with some continuing improvement. Results for a single-case; necessity to enlarge the population tested. | [ |
| Systematic review | Describing systematically the best available intervention evidence for children with cerebral palsy (CP). | Systematic review of systematic reviews. | The lack of certain efficacy evidence for large proportions of the interventions in use within standard care is a problem for people with CP, healthcare providers, purchasers of healthcare and funders. More research using rigorous designs is urgently needed as CP is the most common physical disability of childhood with a life-long impact. | [ |
| Review article | Investigating treatments and current evidence to improve upper limb outcomes and goal attainment. | Review of the literature. | Some results have been obtained on larger cohort of patients even if affected by mainly spastic forms. | [ |
| Scientific paper | Evaluating the effect of segment immobilisation on motor scheme recovery. Casting or immobilisation by an orthosis has been suggested also as a treatment aiming to deprive the dystonic segments of motion and sensation, which could help patients reset lost motor schemes. | Clinical study. | Limb immobilisation can be a simple, effective, safe, and inexpensive treatment for focal occupational upper-limb dystonia. | [ |
Fig. 1On the left, the picture shows a rigid hand orthosis designed and constructed for a subject; on the right, the same device worn by a subject affected by writer’s cramp (courtesy of Taş [69])
Soft orthoses and orthotic suits
| Type of publication | Aims and summary | Approach and Sample size | Conclusions | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Book chapter | Describing different devices employed especially to avoid deformities, block the function, and prevent the beginning of the chain created as a functional pattern. | Summary of rehabilitation strategies for dystonia in children. | Splints made of soft, semi-rigid or combined materials can be useful in supporting functional position during movement, containing the joint and giving proprioceptive information. | [ |
| Scientific paper | Evaluating Lycra garments: (1) changes in functional daily skills, (2) changes in posture and movement of the upper body, (3) client/families’ assessment of their child’s responses and function/behavioural changes. | Clinical study. | The functional benefit of Lycra garments for children with CP is mainly due to improvements in proximal stability, but this should be weighed against the inconvenience and loss of independence. | [ |
| Scientific paper | Reporting on the orthotic management of cerebral palsy. In particular, Lycra garments are designed and used to allow some voluntary movements or at least preserve and favour residual motion. | Report about the recommendations from a consensus conference. | Effectiveness of Lycra soft garments to improve function is not established, and should be evaluated carefully. | [ |
| Scientific review | Investigating if Lycra garments could improve function and posture in children with cerebral palsy. | Systematic review of the literature. | Many of the studies considered, include children with different types of cerebral palsy, but do not use objective outcome measures. | [ |
| Scientific paper | Evaluating the effects of the Adeli suit (various versions). | Clinical study. | Data obtained for the hyperkinetic group are | [ |
| Scientific paper | Comparing the efficacy of Adeli suit treatment (AST) with neurodevelopmental treatment (NDT) in children with cerebral palsy (CP). | Clinical study. | Improvement of efficacy index for children with higher levels of motor function, without the gain of additional gross motor skills, as reflected by a reduced metabolic cost of external work. Not evident the retention in comparison to other treatments. | [ |
| Scientific paper | Examining the effects of wearing a therapeutic suit during an intensive therapy program on motor function among children with cerebral palsy. | Clinical study. | Children wearing the Therasuit during an intensive therapy program did not demonstrate improved motor function compared with those wearing a control suit during the same program. | [ |
| Scientific review | Evaluating the available evidence on the effects of interventions based on the use of therapeutic suits in the treatment of impairments and functional limitations of children with cerebral palsy. | Systematic review of the literature | The low quality of evidence suggests caution in recommending the use of these therapeutic suits. | [ |
| Systematic review | Describing systematically the best available intervention evidence for children with cerebral palsy (CP). | Systematic review of systematic reviews. | Conflicting evidence. One trial suggests positive | [ |
Devices providing stimulation
| Type of publication | Aims and summary | Approach and Sample size | Conclusions | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scientific paper | Evaluating a portable device including electromyography (EMG) and vibration feedback of muscle activity for providing a sensory stimulation (peripherally) on the affected limb. The hypothesis is that additional proprioceptive feedback, could help facilitate motor control. | Preclinical trial. | The ability to voluntarily and selectively control the activation of a target muscle at different levels of the upper limb kinematic chain could be improved by means of a EMG-based vibrotactile biofeedback device placed on the skin over that muscle. Prolonged surface EMG biofeedback can facilitate improvement of function for behaviourally relevant tasks in each child’s natural environment. | [ |
| Systematic review | Describing systematically the best available intervention evidence for children with cerebral palsy (CP). | Systematic review of systematic reviews. | The electronic feedback about muscle activity, to teach voluntary control, can improve muscle activation and active range of motion in an effective manner if combined with other treatments. | [ |
Fig. 2Effects of external forces on EMG. The figure, from left to right respectively, reports the kinematics (first 3 graphs from the top) and the dynamics (last 3 graphs) of the upper limb when different type of loads are applied: inertial, viscous and elastic forces. Red arrows underline the main variations in burst intensity: antagonist bursts increase for inertial loads, decreases with viscous loads, and decreases slightly with elastic loads (adapted from Gottlieb [67])