| Literature DB >> 32039171 |
Marta Gandolla1, Alberto Antonietti2, Valeria Longatelli2, Alessandra Pedrocchi2.
Abstract
Background: This systematic review summarizes the current evidence about the effectiveness of wearable assistive technologies for upper limbs support during activities of daily living for individuals with neuromuscular diseases.Entities:
Keywords: assistive devices; meta-analysis; neuromuscular disease; upper limbs; wearable
Year: 2020 PMID: 32039171 PMCID: PMC6992540 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2019.00450
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Keywords used for searching in electronic database.
| 1. Neuromuscular disease | 14. Assistive device | 27. Upper extremity |
| 2. Neurodegenerative disease | 15. Self help device | 28. Upper limb |
| 3. Neuromotor disease | 16. Home device | 29. Arm |
| 4. Muscle weakness | 17. Wearable device | 30. Forearm |
| 5. Arm impairment | 18. Exoskeleton | 31. Shoulder |
| 6. Muscular dystrophy | 19. Orthotic device | 32. Elbow |
| 7. Multiple sclerosis | 20. Robotic arm | |
| 8. Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis | 21. Dynamic arm support | |
| 9. Spinal muscular atrophy | 22. Electrical stimulation device | |
| 10. Paresis | 23. Neuroprosthesis | |
| 11. Spinal cord injury | 24. Gravity balancing | |
| 12. Myopathy | 25. External manipulator | |
| 13. Neuropathy | 26. Man-machine system |
Formulas for merging data of two groups.
| Sample Size | |||
| Mean Value | |||
| Standard Deviation | σ1 | σ2 |
Details of study interventions.
| Gunn et al. ( | 55 | Five-point Likert scale | Passive (Wrex) | Attached to the wheelchair or to a body jacket |
| Shank ( | 25 | COPM | Passive (Wrex) | Attached to the wheelchair or worn by the patient |
| van der Heide and de Witte ( | 19 | Perceived functional benefit | Active (Armon Edero, Armon Ayura, Darwing) or Passive (Balancer) | Attached to the wheelchair, chair or table |
| Peters et al. ( | 18 | Fugl-Meyer scale | Active (EMyoPro Motion-G and powered orthosis) | Worn by the patient on wheelchair |
| Rahman et al. ( | 13 | Jebsen Hand Function Test | Passive (Wrex) | Attached to the wheelchair |
| Iwamuro et al. ( | 10 | FOR | Passive (T-Wrex) | Attached to the wheelchair |
| Estilow et al. ( | 9 | ROM | Passive (Wrex) | Attached to the wheelchair |
| Jan Burgers ( | 8 | ARAT | Active (Top/Help Electrical) or Passive (Top/Help Mechanical) | Attached to the wheelchair |
| Lund et al. ( | 7 | IPPA | Active (Armon) | Attached to the wheelchair or placed on a floor stand |
| Sanchez et al. ( | 5 | Fugl-Meyer scale | Passive (T-Wrex) | Attached to the wheelchair |
| van der Heide et al. ( | 5 | ROM | Active (Top/Help) or Passive (Sling) | Attached to the wheelchair |
| Bastiaens et al. ( | 4 | ROM | Active (HapticMaster and Sling) | Attached to the wheelchair |
| Ambrosini et al. ( | 3 | RMSE | Active (NMES and passive exoskeleton) | Attached to the wheelchair |
| Kooren et al. ( | 3 | PUL | Passive (A-gear) | Worn by the patient on wheelchair |
N, number of participants in each study; ARAT, Action Research Arm Test; COPM, Canadian Occupational Performance Measure; FOR, Fraction Of Reach; IPPA, Individually Prioritized Problem Assessment; PUL, Performance of the Upper Limb; RMSE, Root Mean Square Error; ROM, Range Of Motion.
Participants' characteristics in studies.
| Gunn et al. ( | AMC (27), CP (5), MD (8), SMA (9), others (6) | 9 (6) | — | — |
| Shank ( | AMC (14), CP (3), MD (2), SMA (2), others (4) | 8 (1) | 9 F, 16 M | — |
| van der Heide and de Witte ( | ALS (1), MD (1), MS (3), SCI (1), SMA (8), others (5) | 55 (15) | 11 F, 8 M | 3.4 (1.7) points in Brooke scale |
| Peters et al. ( | Stroke (18) | 56 (12) | 7 F, 11 M | — |
| Rahman et al. ( | MD (10), SMA (3) | 13 (4) | 1 F, 12 M | 3.3 (0.7) points in MMT |
| Iwamuro et al. ( | Chronic hemiparesis after stroke (10) | 58 (14) | 5 F, 5 M | — |
| Estilow et al. ( | DMD (9) | 15 (2) | 9 M | 4.5 (0.7) points in Brooke scale |
| Jan Burgers ( | DMD (8) | 15 (3) | 8 M | 3.8 (1.0) points in Brooke scale |
| Lund et al. ( | ALS (2), AMC (1), MD (2), SMA (2) | — | 5 F, 2 M | — |
| Sanchez et al. ( | Chronic stroke (5) | — | — | — |
| van der Heide et al. ( | ALS (1), MD (1), SCI (1), Stroke (1), others (1) | 52 (15) | 3 F, 2 M | 3.4 (0.9) points in Brooke scale |
| Bastiaens et al. ( | MS (4) | 57 (8) | — | 35.8 (20.8) points in MI |
| Ambrosini et al. ( | SCI (3) | 51 (19) | 3 M | 43.7 (15.8) points in MI |
| Kooren et al. ( | DMD (3) | 15 (2) | 3 M | 2.6 (0.6) points in Brooke scale |
AMC, Arthrogryposis Multiplex Congenital; ALS, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis; CP, Cerebral Palsy; DMD, Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy; MD, Muscular Dystrophy; MS, Multiple Sclerosis; SCI, Spinal Cortex Injury; SMA, Spinal Muscular Atrophy; M, Male; F, Female; MMT, Manual Muscle Test; MI, Motricity Index.
Four-levels color schema in order to integrate the quality of evidence assessment and the strength of recommendations.
| Strong recommendation based on high level of evidence | Strong recommendation based on moderate level of evidence | Strong recommendation based on low level of evidence | Strong recommendation based on expert opinion | |
| Moderate recommendation based on high level of evidence | Moderate recommendation based on moderate level of evidence | Moderate recommendation based on low level of evidence | Moderate recommendation based on very low level of evidence; diverging expert opinions | |
| Weak recommendation based on high level of evidence | Weak recommendation based on moderate level of evidence | Weak recommendation based on low level of evidence | Weak recommendation based on very low level of evidence; diverging expert opinion | |
| Recommendation based on high level of evidence | Recommendation based on moderate level of evidence | Recommendation based on low level of evidence | Recommendation based on very low level of evidence |
Colors represent the strength of recommendation regarding the investigated intervention (i.e., use of AD) based on the level of evidence. Green, yellow and orange represent strong, moderate and weak recommendation to use AD, respectively, while red means recommendation not to use AD.
Figure 1PRISMA flowchart of the literature search process.
Figure 2Risk of bias of the fourteen included studies presented as percentages across all included studies.
Forest plots of comparison: Treatment group (with assistive device) vs. control group (without assistive device).
Weights are computed with (Equation 6) and expressed as percentage.
Summary of findings table for the main comparisons.
| ADL for the most representative study (Peters et al., | SMD | 184 (14 studies) | ⊕⊕○○ | |
| • | ADL for the most representative study (Peters et al., | SMD | 94 (6 studies) | ⊕⊕○○ |
| • | ADL for the most representative study (Iwamuro et al., | SMD | 274 (11 studies) | ⊕⊕○○ |
| • | ADL for the most representative study (van der Heide et al., | SMD | 212 (4 studies) | ⊕⊕⊕○ |
| • | ADL for the most representative study (Peters et al., | SMD | 156 (10 studies) | ⊕⊕○○ |
The study with the lowest risk of bias and the highest number of participants was chosen. Mean and SD are reported.
ADL, Activities of daily living; CI, Confidence interval; SD, Standard deviation; SMD, Standardized mean difference.
GRADE working group grades of evidence:
High: Further research is very unlikely to change our confidence in the estimate of effect.
Moderate: Further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate.
Low: Further research is very likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate.
Very low quality: We are very uncertain about the estimate.
Explanations:.
a. Risk of bias.
b. Imprecision of results.
c. Publication bias.
The four circles represent the maximum level of evidence (i.e., high, corresponding to four points). Each analysis is associated with its found level of evidence, represented by the circle marked with a cross. Indeed, “low” is represented by 2 points over 4, “moderate” 3 points over 4.