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Self-Paced Reaching after Stroke: A Quantitative Assessment of Longitudinal and Directional Sensitivity Using the H-Man Planar Robot for Upper Limb Neurorehabilitation

Technology aided measures offer a sensitive, accurate and time-efficient approach for the assessment of sensorimotor function after neurological insult compared to standard clinical assessments. This study investigated the sensitivity of robotic measures to capture differences in planar reaching mov...

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Autores principales: Hussain, Asif, Budhota, Aamani, Hughes, Charmayne Mary Lee, Dailey, Wayne D., Vishwanath, Deshmukh A., Kuah, Christopher W. K., Yam, Lester H. L., Loh, Yong J., Xiang, Liming, Chua, Karen S. G., Burdet, Etienne, Campolo, Domenico
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5078476/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27826223
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2016.00477
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author Hussain, Asif
Budhota, Aamani
Hughes, Charmayne Mary Lee
Dailey, Wayne D.
Vishwanath, Deshmukh A.
Kuah, Christopher W. K.
Yam, Lester H. L.
Loh, Yong J.
Xiang, Liming
Chua, Karen S. G.
Burdet, Etienne
Campolo, Domenico
author_facet Hussain, Asif
Budhota, Aamani
Hughes, Charmayne Mary Lee
Dailey, Wayne D.
Vishwanath, Deshmukh A.
Kuah, Christopher W. K.
Yam, Lester H. L.
Loh, Yong J.
Xiang, Liming
Chua, Karen S. G.
Burdet, Etienne
Campolo, Domenico
author_sort Hussain, Asif
collection PubMed
description Technology aided measures offer a sensitive, accurate and time-efficient approach for the assessment of sensorimotor function after neurological insult compared to standard clinical assessments. This study investigated the sensitivity of robotic measures to capture differences in planar reaching movements as a function of neurological status (stroke, healthy), direction (front, ipsilateral, contralateral), movement segment (outbound, inbound), and time (baseline, post-training, 2-week follow-up) using a planar, two-degrees of freedom, robotic-manipulator (H-Man). Twelve chronic stroke (age: 55 ± 10.0 years, 5 female, 7 male, time since stroke: 11.2 ± 6.0 months) and nine aged-matched healthy participants (age: 53 ± 4.3 years, 5 female, 4 male) participated in this study. Both healthy and stroke participants performed planar reaching movements in contralateral, ipsilateral and front directions with the H-Man, and the robotic measures, spectral arc length (SAL), normalized time to peak velocities (T(peakN)), and root-mean square error (RMSE) were evaluated. Healthy participants went through a one-off session of assessment to investigate the baseline. Stroke participants completed a 2-week intensive robotic training plus standard arm therapy (8 × 90 min sessions). Motor function for stroke participants was evaluated prior to training (baseline, week-0), immediately following training (post-training, week-2), and 2-weeks after training (follow-up, week-4) using robotic assessment and the clinical measures Fugl-Meyer Assessment (FMA), Activity-Research-Arm Test (ARAT), and grip-strength. Robotic assessments were able to capture differences due to neurological status, movement direction, and movement segment. Movements performed by stroke participants were less-smooth, featured longer T(peakN), and larger RMSE values, compared to healthy controls. Significant movement direction differences were observed, with improved reaching performance for the front, compared to ipsilateral and contralateral movement directions. There were group differences depending on movement segment. Outbound reaching movements were smoother and featured longer T(peakN) values than inbound movements for control participants, whereas SAL, T(peakN), and RMSE values were similar regardless of movement segment for stroke patients. Significant change in performance was observed between initial and post-assessments using H-Man in stroke participants, compared to conventional scales which showed no significant difference. Results of the study indicate the potential of H-Man as a sensitive tool for tracking changes in performance compared to ordinal scales (i.e., FM, ARAT).
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spelling pubmed-50784762016-11-08 Self-Paced Reaching after Stroke: A Quantitative Assessment of Longitudinal and Directional Sensitivity Using the H-Man Planar Robot for Upper Limb Neurorehabilitation Hussain, Asif Budhota, Aamani Hughes, Charmayne Mary Lee Dailey, Wayne D. Vishwanath, Deshmukh A. Kuah, Christopher W. K. Yam, Lester H. L. Loh, Yong J. Xiang, Liming Chua, Karen S. G. Burdet, Etienne Campolo, Domenico Front Neurosci Neuroscience Technology aided measures offer a sensitive, accurate and time-efficient approach for the assessment of sensorimotor function after neurological insult compared to standard clinical assessments. This study investigated the sensitivity of robotic measures to capture differences in planar reaching movements as a function of neurological status (stroke, healthy), direction (front, ipsilateral, contralateral), movement segment (outbound, inbound), and time (baseline, post-training, 2-week follow-up) using a planar, two-degrees of freedom, robotic-manipulator (H-Man). Twelve chronic stroke (age: 55 ± 10.0 years, 5 female, 7 male, time since stroke: 11.2 ± 6.0 months) and nine aged-matched healthy participants (age: 53 ± 4.3 years, 5 female, 4 male) participated in this study. Both healthy and stroke participants performed planar reaching movements in contralateral, ipsilateral and front directions with the H-Man, and the robotic measures, spectral arc length (SAL), normalized time to peak velocities (T(peakN)), and root-mean square error (RMSE) were evaluated. Healthy participants went through a one-off session of assessment to investigate the baseline. Stroke participants completed a 2-week intensive robotic training plus standard arm therapy (8 × 90 min sessions). Motor function for stroke participants was evaluated prior to training (baseline, week-0), immediately following training (post-training, week-2), and 2-weeks after training (follow-up, week-4) using robotic assessment and the clinical measures Fugl-Meyer Assessment (FMA), Activity-Research-Arm Test (ARAT), and grip-strength. Robotic assessments were able to capture differences due to neurological status, movement direction, and movement segment. Movements performed by stroke participants were less-smooth, featured longer T(peakN), and larger RMSE values, compared to healthy controls. Significant movement direction differences were observed, with improved reaching performance for the front, compared to ipsilateral and contralateral movement directions. There were group differences depending on movement segment. Outbound reaching movements were smoother and featured longer T(peakN) values than inbound movements for control participants, whereas SAL, T(peakN), and RMSE values were similar regardless of movement segment for stroke patients. Significant change in performance was observed between initial and post-assessments using H-Man in stroke participants, compared to conventional scales which showed no significant difference. Results of the study indicate the potential of H-Man as a sensitive tool for tracking changes in performance compared to ordinal scales (i.e., FM, ARAT). Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-10-25 /pmc/articles/PMC5078476/ /pubmed/27826223 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2016.00477 Text en Copyright © 2016 Hussain, Budhota, Hughes, Dailey, Vishwanath, Kuah, Yam, Loh, Xiang, Chua, Burdet and Campolo. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Neuroscience
Hussain, Asif
Budhota, Aamani
Hughes, Charmayne Mary Lee
Dailey, Wayne D.
Vishwanath, Deshmukh A.
Kuah, Christopher W. K.
Yam, Lester H. L.
Loh, Yong J.
Xiang, Liming
Chua, Karen S. G.
Burdet, Etienne
Campolo, Domenico
Self-Paced Reaching after Stroke: A Quantitative Assessment of Longitudinal and Directional Sensitivity Using the H-Man Planar Robot for Upper Limb Neurorehabilitation
title Self-Paced Reaching after Stroke: A Quantitative Assessment of Longitudinal and Directional Sensitivity Using the H-Man Planar Robot for Upper Limb Neurorehabilitation
title_full Self-Paced Reaching after Stroke: A Quantitative Assessment of Longitudinal and Directional Sensitivity Using the H-Man Planar Robot for Upper Limb Neurorehabilitation
title_fullStr Self-Paced Reaching after Stroke: A Quantitative Assessment of Longitudinal and Directional Sensitivity Using the H-Man Planar Robot for Upper Limb Neurorehabilitation
title_full_unstemmed Self-Paced Reaching after Stroke: A Quantitative Assessment of Longitudinal and Directional Sensitivity Using the H-Man Planar Robot for Upper Limb Neurorehabilitation
title_short Self-Paced Reaching after Stroke: A Quantitative Assessment of Longitudinal and Directional Sensitivity Using the H-Man Planar Robot for Upper Limb Neurorehabilitation
title_sort self-paced reaching after stroke: a quantitative assessment of longitudinal and directional sensitivity using the h-man planar robot for upper limb neurorehabilitation
topic Neuroscience
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5078476/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27826223
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2016.00477
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