| Literature DB >> 34823545 |
Peter H Wilson1, Jeffrey M Rogers2, Karin Vogel3, Bert Steenbergen4, Thomas B McGuckian5, Jonathan Duckworth6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Home-based rehabilitation of arm function is a significant gap in service provision for adult stroke. The EDNA-22 tablet is a portable virtual rehabilitation-based system that provides a viable option for home-based rehabilitation using a suite of tailored movement tasks, and performance monitoring via cloud computing data storage. The study reported here aimed to compare use of the EDNA system with an active control (Graded Repetitive Arm Supplementary Program-GRASP training) group using a parallel RCT design.Entities:
Keywords: Cognition; Motor activity; Rehabilitation; Stroke; Upper extremity; Virtual rehabilitation
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34823545 PMCID: PMC8613521 DOI: 10.1186/s12984-021-00956-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroeng Rehabil ISSN: 1743-0003 Impact factor: 4.262
Fig. 1CONSORT participant flow diagram
Fig. 2The EDNA-22 system showing a goal-directed Random Bases task with visual augmented feedback, and b exploratory Swarm task
Demographic, neurological, and functional characteristics of the treatment and control groups at pre-test
| EDNA treatment ( | GRASP control ( | Comparison test | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years)a | 69.9 (13.8), 49–90 | 77.3 (8.9), 60–85 | |
| Genderb | |||
| Male | 7 | 5 | |
| Female | 3 | 2 | |
| Rehab NIHSSa | 6.7 (3.0) | 7.8 (5.0) | |
| Admission FIM scorea | 45.9 (24.8) | 40.6 (18.7) | |
| Abilhand | 21.1 (10.5) | 36.4 (10.4) | |
| FSS Total | 38.7 (13.5) | 30.3 (2.2) | |
| Time since stroke (days)a | 137.5 (152.4) | 107.4 (56.4) | |
| Stroke typeb | |||
| Ischemic strokeb | 9 (90%) | 5 (71%) | |
| Hemorrhagic strokeb | 1 | 2 | |
| Side of lesion: left vs. right | 6 left: 4 right | 5 left: 2 right | |
| BBT, MAHa | 23.5 (9.6) | 15.7 (10.8) | |
| BBT, LAHa | 41.2 (14.4) | 36.6 (10.8) | |
| 9HPT, MAHa | 0.21 (0.20) | 0.08 (0.14) | |
| 9HPT, LAHa | 0.58 (0.27) | 0.48 (0.15) | |
| MoCAa | 18.5 (5.1) | 17.0 (7.8) | |
| SIS Recovery Rating | 55.5 (16.4) | 45.0 (20.7) | |
| NFI Totalc | 155.6 (38.1) |
NIHSS National Institute of Health Stroke Scale range 0–24; FIM Functional Independence Measure; FSS Fatigue Severity Scale; BBT Box and Block Test; MAH More Affected Hand; LAH Less Affected Hand; 9HPT Nine Hole Peg Test (pegs/s); MoCA Montreal Cognitive Assessment; SIS Stroke Impact Scale; NFI Neurobehavioral Functioning Inventory
aMean (SD), Range
bNo. (%)
cNFI data not available for GRASP group
Primary motor, cognitive and functional outcomes for the EDNA treatment and GRASP control groups at pre-test, post-test and follow-up
| Primary outcomea | EDNA treatment ( | GRASP control ( | Group effect on pre-post change score ( | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-test | Post-test | Follow-up | Pre-post Change scoreb | Effect sized | Pre-test | Post-test | Follow-up | Pre-post change scoreb | Effect sized | ||
| Motor | |||||||||||
| BBT-MAH | 23.5 (9.6) | 34.7 (13.8) | 35.5 (12.8) | 11.2 (9.8) | 0.90 | 15.7 (10.8) | 16.0 (9.4) | 17.9 (8.1) | − 0.3 (9.9) | 0.03 | |
| BBT-LAH | 41.2 (14.4) | 46.9 (10.9) | 48.8 (12.5) | 5.7 (13.2) | 0.43 | 36.6 (10.8) | 36.0 (12.5) | 38.4 (9.7) | 0.6 (7.8) | 0.05 | |
| 9HPT-MAH | 0.21 (0.20) | 0.34 (0.25) | 0.13 (0.20) | 0.55 | 0.08 (0.14) | 0.14 (0.13) | 0.06 (0.11) | 0.42 | |||
| 9HPT-LAH | 0.58 (0.27) | 0.59 (0.25) | 0.01 (0.24) | 0.04 | 0.48 (0.15) | 0.49 (0.08) | 0.01 (0.01) | 0.08 | |||
| Cognitive | |||||||||||
| MoCA | 18.5 (5.1) | 21.9 (4.1) | 23.0 (5.0) | 3.4 (3.0) | 0.70 | 17.0 (7.8) | 18.7 (6.0) | 21.1 (5.6) | 0.1 (3.2) | 0.23 | |
| Functional | |||||||||||
| SIS—Recovery | 55.5 (16.4) | 64.8 (15.0) | 9.3 (14.3) | .57 | 45.0 (20.7) | 43.8 (21.3) | − 1.2 (1.9) | 0.05 | |||
| NFI—Informant (Total) | 155.6 (38.1) | 138.0 (29.8) | 136.1 (37.3) | − 17.6 (19.5) | .49 | ||||||
BBT Box and Block Test; LAH Less Affected Hand; MAH More Affected Hand; 9HPT Nine Hole Peg Test (pegs/s); MoCA Montreal Cognitive Assessment; SIS Stroke Impact Scale; NFI Neurobehavioral Functioning Inventory
aMean (SD)
bDependent-samples t-test comparing pre-test vs. post-test
cIndependent-samples t-test comparing EDNA vs. GRASP
dHedges’ g
*p < Benjamini–Hochberg critical value
Fig. 3Effect size estimates (Hedges’ g) for pre-post change on measures of motor, cognitive and functional performance. (Note NFI data was not available for the GRASP group)