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Evaluation of a functional hand orthosis combined with electrical stimulation adjunct to arm-hand rehabilitation in subacute stroke patients with a severely to moderately affected hand function

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Version 2 2019-04-22, 09:13
Version 1 2018-01-10, 07:45
journal contribution
posted on 2019-04-22, 09:13 authored by Johan Anton Franck, Rob Johannes Elise Marie Smeets, Henk Alexander Maria Seelen

Purpose: To investigate the usability and effectiveness of a functional hand orthosis, combined with electrical stimulation adjunct to therapy-as-usual, on functional use of the moderately/severely impaired hand in sub-acute stroke patients.

Materials and Methods: Single case experiment (A-B-A′-design) involving eight sub-acute stroke patients. The functional hand orthosis and electrical stimulation were used for six weeks, four days/week, 45′/day. Outcome measures: Action_Research_Arm_Test, Intrinsic_Motivation_Inventory.

Results: At group level, patients improved 19.2 points (median value) (interquartile range: [8.8, 29.5] points) on the Action_Research_Arm_Test (p = 0.001). After correcting for spontaneous recovery and/or therapy-as-usual effects Action_Research_Arm_Test scores still improved significantly (median: 17.2 points; interquartile range: [5.1, 29.2] points) (p = 0.002). At individual level, six patients had improved as to arm-hand skill performance at follow-up (p < = 0.010). In one patient, arm-hand skill performance improvement did not attain statistical significance. In another patient, no arm-hand skill performance improvement was observed. Average Intrinsic_Motivation_Inventory sub-scores were between 4.6 and 6.3 (maximum: 7), except for ‘perceived pressure/tension’ (3.3).

Conclusion: Sub-acute stroke patients who display only little/modest improvement on their capacity to perform daily activities, seem to benefit from training with a dynamic arm orthosis in combination with electrical stimulation. Patients’ perceived intrinsic motivation and sense of self-regulation was high. Implications for rehabilitation

Arm-hand training featuring the dynamic hand orthosis in combination with electrical stimulation shows a shift from no dexterity to dexterity.

As to the users’ experience regarding the dynamic hand orthosis, patients perceive a high-intrinsic motivation and sense of self-regulation.

Combining the orthosis with electrical stimulation creates opportunities for a nonfunctional hand towards task-oriented training.

Arm-hand training featuring the dynamic hand orthosis in combination with electrical stimulation shows a shift from no dexterity to dexterity.

As to the users’ experience regarding the dynamic hand orthosis, patients perceive a high-intrinsic motivation and sense of self-regulation.

Combining the orthosis with electrical stimulation creates opportunities for a nonfunctional hand towards task-oriented training.

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