| Literature DB >> 33947828 |
Rocco S Calabrò1, Gregorio Sorrentino2, Anna Cassio3, Davide Mazzoli4, Elisa Andrenelli5, Emiliana Bizzarini6,7, Isabella Campanini8, Simona M Carmignano9, Simona Cerulli10, Carmelo Chisari11, Valentina Colombo12, Stefania Dalise11, Cira Fundarò13, Valeria Gazzotti14, Daniele Mazzoleni15, Miryam Mazzucchelli16, Corrado Melegari17, Andrea Merlo4,8, Giulia Stampacchia17, Paolo Boldrini18, Stefano Mazzoleni19, Federico Posteraro20, Paolo Benanti21, Enrico Castelli22, Francesco Draicchio23, Vincenzo Falabella24, Silvia Galeri25, Francesca Gimigliano26, Mauro Grigioni27, Stefano Mazzon28, Franco Molteni29, Giovanni Morone30, Maurizio Petrarca31, Alessandro Picelli32, Michele Senatore33, Giuseppe Turchetti34, Donatella Bonaiuti35.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Stroke is the third leading cause of adult disability worldwide, and lower extremity motor impairment is one of the major determinants of long-term disability. Although robotic therapy is becoming more and more utilized in research protocols for lower limb stroke rehabilitation, the gap between research evidence and its use in clinical practice is still significant. The aim of this study was to determine the scope, quality, and consistency of guidelines for robotic lower limb rehabilitation after stroke, in order to provide clinical recommendations. EVIDENCE ACQUISITION: We systematically reviewed stroke rehabilitation guideline recommendations between January 1, 2010 and October 31, 2020. We explored electronic databases (N.=4), guideline repositories and professional rehabilitation networks (N.=12). Two independent reviewers used the Appraisal of Guidelines for Research and Evaluation (AGREE) II instrument, and brief syntheses were used to evaluate and compare the different recommendations, considering only the most recent version. EVIDENCE SYNTHESIS: From the 1219 papers screened, ten eligible guidelines were identified from seven different regions/countries. Four of the included guidelines focused on stroke management, the other six on stroke rehabilitation. Robotic rehabilitation is generally recommended to improve lower limb motor function, including gait and strength. Unfortunately, there is still no consensus about the timing, frequency, training session duration and the exact characteristics of subjects who could benefit from robotics.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33947828 DOI: 10.23736/S1973-9087.21.06887-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Phys Rehabil Med ISSN: 1973-9087 Impact factor: 2.874