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Volume 88, Issue 2, Pages 142-149 (February 2007)


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Robotic-Assisted Rehabilitation of the Upper Limb After Acute Stroke

Presented in part to the Italian Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Society, 2004, Chieti, Italy; the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 2005, Philadelphia, PA; and International Conference on Rehabilitation Robotics, 2005, Chicago, IL.

Stefano Masiero, MDaCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Andrea Celia, MDa, Giulio Rosati, PhDb, Mario Armani, MDc

Abstract 

Masiero S, Celia A, Rosati G, Armani M. Robotic-assisted rehabilitation of the upper limb after acute stroke.

Objective

To investigate whether early therapy with a novel robotic device can reduce motor impairment and enhance functional recovery of poststroke patients with hemiparetic and hemiplegic upper limb.

Design

A single-blind randomized controlled trial, with an 8-month follow-up.

Setting

Neurologic department and rehabilitation hospital.

Participants

Thirty-five patients with acute (≤1wk of onset), unilateral, ischemic embolic, or thrombotic stroke.

Interventions

Patients of both groups received the same dose and length per day of standard poststroke multidisciplinary rehabilitation. Patients were randomly assigned to 2 groups. The experimental group (n=17) received additional early sensorimotor robotic training, 4 hours a week for 5 weeks; the control group (n=18) was exposed to the robotic device, 30 minutes a week, twice a week, but the exercises were performed with the unimpaired upper limb. Training by robot consisted of peripheral manipulation of the shoulder and elbow of the impaired limb, correlated with visual stimuli.

Main Outcome Measures

The Fugl-Meyer Assessment (FMA) of upper-extremity function (shoulder/elbow and coordination and wrist/hand subsections) to measure each trained limb segment; the Medical Research Council (MRC) score to measure the strength of muscle force during 3 actions: shoulder abduction (MRC deltoid), elbow flexion (MRC biceps), and wrist flexion (MRC wrist flexors); the FIM instrument and its motor component; and the Trunk Control Test (TCT) and Modified Ashworth Scale (MAS).

Results

Compared with the patients in the control group, the experimental group showed significant gains in motor impairment and functional recovery of the upper limb after robot therapy, as measured by the MRC deltoid (P≤.05) and biceps (P<.05) scores, the FMA for the proximal upper arm (P<.05), the FIM instrument (P<.05), and the FIM motor score (P<.01); these gains were also sustained at the 3- and 8-month follow-up. The FMA and MRC wrist flexor test findings did not differ statistically either at the end of training or at the follow-up sessions. We found no significant differences in MAS and TCT in either group in any of the evaluations. No adverse effects occurred and the robotic approach was very well accepted.

Conclusions

Patients who received robotic therapy in addition to conventional therapy showed greater reductions in motor impairment and improvements in functional abilities. Robotic therapy may therefore effectively complement standard rehabilitation from the start, by providing therapeutic support for patients with poststroke plegic and paretic upper limb.

a Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Padova, School of Medicine, Padova, Italy

b Department of Innovation in Mechanics and Management, University of Padova, School of Medicine, Padova, Italy

c Department of Neuroscience, University of Padova, School of Medicine, Padova, Italy.

Corresponding Author InformationReprint requests to Stefano Masiero, MD, Dept of Rehabilitation (Servizio di Riabilitazione), University of Padova, Via Giustiniani 2, 35128 Padova, Italy

 Supported by the Italian University Ministry (grant no. grant RBAU019C3C_001).

No commercial party having a direct financial interest in the results of the research supporting this article has or will confer a benefit upon the author(s) or upon any organization with which the author(s) is/are associated.

PII: S0003-9993(06)01482-1

doi:10.1016/j.apmr.2006.10.032


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