May 7, 2010
Rehabilitation of Arm Function After Stroke - Literature Review, Review
Here’s a great scientific literature review of Arm Function Rehabilitation After Stroke. Unfortunately, it isn’t hugely accessible to non-technical readers (not many people know what “ipsilesional corticospinal excitability” means). Here’s my review of the main points of the article, in plain terms:
- This study examined 66 other studies published between 2004 and 2008 from Medline using the keywords “stroke”, “upper limb”, and “rehabilitation”.
- Only randomized control studies were included in the review.
- High intensity rehabilitation training programs during subacute stroke rehabilitaiton (less than 6-months post-stroke) resulted in significant improvements in arm function.
- Learned non-use (gradually giving up trying to use a partially paralyzed arm) is the result of brain re-organization that starts within hours of a stroke.
- Rehabilitation that concentrates on compensation using the healthy limb can accelerate and perpetuate learned non-use. Some of the studies examined inhibition of the healthy part of the brain’s motor cortex using TMS.
- Natural plasticity of the brain after stroke, which is associated with a re-allocation of brain networks from one function to another, leads to a certain amount of natural upper extremity neurological recovery
- Training by repeating tasks directly linked to daily life activities promotes recovery. An “enriched” sensory environment (proprioceptive, visual, etc.) while performing these tasks is beneficial.
- Residual voluntary motor ability at 1-month post stroke is the best predictor of how much hand dexterity will be regained.
- In people whose stroke occurred 6 months or more previously (referred to as ”chronic”), 2 hours of transcutaneous neurostimulation (with an FES stimulator, for example) delivered just prior to rehabilitation training sessions, improves function of the weak hand
- The impact of acupuncture on upper limb motor recovery is not conclusive.
- Thermal stimulation, where patients are encouraged to take their paretic arm away when they feel an uncomfortable sensation, could promote recovery.
- Constraint-induced movement therapy is effective in reversing learned non-use of a paretic arm. It is believed that CIMT encourages the brain re-allocation referred to above.
- For higher-functioning chronic stroke survivors, mental imagery: imagining moving the paretic limb, or imagining movements performed by another person, are beneficial to recovery of motor function. No benefit has been demonstrated in lower-functioning stroke survivors and those with cognitive impairments. Mental imagery hasn’t been the subject of many randomly controlled studies.
- Unilateral task practice using the paretic limb yields improvements superior to those of bimanual task practice.
- Both transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and transcranial electrical stimulation (TES) have been shown to facilitate some motor recovery, but the cost/benefit and risk/benfit ratios have yet to be evaluated.
- TMS inhibition of the healthy part of the motor cortex can temporarily improve dexterity of the paretic limb, but at this stage this is not a clinically relevant treatment. In some cases, the inhibition procedure may actually be harmful.
- Constraint of the healthy limb in CIMT doesn’t yield more functional improvements than intensive movement therapy without a constraint.
- More intensive training very soon after a stroke doesn’t yield functional improvement beyond that of standard treatment.
- One year after a stroke, 9 hours of movement therapy isn’t sufficient to yield clinically significant results, whereas 57 hours of rehabilitation training does yield results for people with moderate motor impairment.
- EMG-triggered electrical stimulation eliciting hand opening, (i.e. bursts of electrical stimulation of a muscle initiated by weak voluntary activation of the muscle), has been claimed to be more efficacious than electrical stimulation triggered by other means, but there is insufficient evidence to fully validate this conclusion.
- Electrical stimulation to open the hand during repetitive grasp and release tasks is an integral part of a functional strategy, and promotes motor relearning.
- Several studies have concluded that CIMT is better than conventional therapy, including one study of 43 patients at less than 16 weeks poststroke.
- In a very broad study of 222 patients, CIMT improved pinch grip and several fine motor tasks, but failed to show significant improvement in a patient’s ability to open his or her hand.
- The following details results for various robotics systems:
- NeReBot: A group of acute poststroke subjects (some as early as 7-days poststroke) had better voluntary hand control compared to a group who received no therapy. The results were still evident 8 months later.
- InMotion2: “The motor improvements observed after 18 hours of therapy are not clinically significant and do not spread to distal motor capacities.”
- Bi-Manu-Track: Bimanual and uni-manual rehabilitation yielded similar improvements with the use of this robot.
- MIME and BACTRAC: “The functional improvements on manual dexterous ability are limited to the execution speed of tasks that the patient had already mastered before treatment.” - Author’s therapy recommendations:
| Moderate Motor Impairment | Severe Motor Impairment | |
| Early stroke rehabilitation (< 6 months) |
Functional rehabilitation training (25 hours) including: Distal EMG-stimulation + distal bimanual movements (6 hours) | Bimanual distal robot (10 hours) or Distal EMG-stimulation + distal bilateral movements (20 hours) Then if possible: functional rehabilitation training (15 hours) |
| Chronic stroke rehabilitation (> 6 months) |
Constraint-Induced movement therapy (CI therapy) (30 hours) or Functional rehabilitation training (30 hours) (in a virtual environment setting or with verbal feedback on the performance) + Mental Imagery |
If the neurophysiological criteria are favorable: classic rehabilitation training (50 hours) with trunk restraint including distal EMG-stimulation + distal bilateral movements (20 hours) |
April 21, 2010
Web-Based Hand, Arm, Shoulder Rehabilitation - Literature Review
A new study was published recently in the American Journal of Occupational Therapy detailing the results of a very small study involving a single post-stroke subject for one week of telerehabilitation. You can find more information here.
One may argue that such a study is anecdotal at best, and that a broader study is required to substantiate its claims.
Fortunately, there’s a long history of much more convincing scientific studies involving at-home rehabilitation of people with stroke and other neurological injuries like SCI. Such studies have generally shown positive results, which is why the results of the above study are not too surprising. I’ve provided links to abstracts and quick summaries of a few highlights below:
Efficacy of telemedicine in occupational therapy: a pilot study (2001) - The authors conclude that select occupational therapy evaluation data can be accurately transmitted and properly scored using low-bandwidth telemedicine systems.
Web-based telerehabilitation for the upper extremity after stroke (2002) - A description of a telerehabilitation system for stroke rehabilitation.
An Evaluation Framework for a Rural Home-Based Telerehabilitation Network (2005) - A survey of 43 professionals agreed that there are unmet needs among elderly people who are discharged from hospital settings.
Development of a teletechnology protocol for in-home rehabilitation (2006) - The authors’ results showed promise that both the telerehabilitation technology and intervention procedures were feasible in an elderly population.
A telerehabilitation approach to delivery of constraint-induced movement therapy (2006) - The authors reported large improvements in hand and arm function of post-stroke subjects. The gains were the same under both direct and remote supervision of a therapist.
Telerehabilitation using the Rutgers Master II glove following carpal tunnel release surgery: proof-of-concept (2007) - Dramatic improvements were achieved using the Rutgers Masters II haptic glove. All patients would either very strongly, or strongly recommend similar at-home therapy to others.
Telerehabilitation Using a Virtual Environment Improves Upper Extremity Function in Patients With Stroke (2007) -Home-based rehabilitation of 11 stroke subjects resulted in improvements of hand and arm function that were maintained at the time of a four month post-intervention evaluation.
Telerehabilitation is an exciting new field that holds the promise of providing cost-effective, high quality care to people facing a wide range of medical issues. For information about our telerehabilitation services, visit our stroke and SCI home rehabilitation page.
March 18, 2010
Robot Stroke Rehabilitation Results in “Modest Improvements”
A recent randomized trial of 127 stroke survivors has shown no significant difference between rehabilitation with the assistance of a robotic workstation and more conventional rehabilitation with the assistance of a human.
The study, conducted by Dr. Albert Lo of the Providence VA Medical Center in Rhode Island, separated 127 participants into three groups: human-assisted rehabilitation (50 patients), robot-assisted rehabilitation (49 patients), and usual care consisting of treatment with antiplatelets, antihypertensives and recommendations for diet and exercise (28 patients).
Dr. Lo described improvements in both the robot-assisted and human-assisted as “fairly modest.” He went on to say that the improvements were important “because there’s very little available for people with chronic stroke.”
The study focused on rehabilitation of the upper extremity, involving repetitive rehabilitation exercises in stroke patients with moderate-to-severe arm disability. The rehabilitation programs lasted 12 weeks, three one-hour sessions per week, and involved the same number of repetitions of arm exercises.
Outcome evaluations were performed immediately after the 12 week rehabilitation program, and included the Fugl-Meyer Assessment of basic motor function (the primary endpoint), the Wolf Motor Function Test of time to complete everyday tasks, and the Stroke Impact Scale. No significant differences were found between the human-assisted and robot-assisted treatment groups.
At the end of the follow-up period (36 weeks), patients who received robot or human-assisted rehabilitation had slightly better scores on all outcome measures than those in the usual care.
There were no differences between robot-assisted and human-assisted rehab on any of the outcomes at any time point.
The cost difference in treatment was substantial: the initial cost of the robots was $200,000, and the cost of the robot-assisted rehab program was around $1200 more per patient than that of usual care over the course of the year.
From this article, I gather that the robots were made by Interactive Motion Technologies.
November 6, 2009
ReJoyce Stroke and SCI Clinical Trials
In addition to several completed trials funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and Spinal Research UK, as well as three multi-centre clinical trials underway funded by the SCI-Solutions Network, Canadian Spinal Cord Injury Telerehabilitation and the Victorian Neurotrauma Initiative (Australian ReJoyce SCI Trials), ReJoyce is now part of two more studies coordinated by researchers at the University of Alberta in Edmonton. The first study compares two levels of FES and ReJoyce-based rehabilitation on the recovery of hand function in chronic stroke survivors: FES and ReJoyce. The second study, also based in Edmonton, investigates the effect of a new type of FES implant in combination with ReJoyce-based therapy on people with SCI.
For more information, please contact us.

October 16, 2009
Modified Constraint Induced Movement Therapy Discussion
In early 2008, an online discussion took place between two researchers regarding the implementation details of Constraint Induced Movement Therapy (CIMT). Dr. Steven Wolf, the principle investigator of the 2006 EXCITE study makes some interesting comments about Dr. Steven Page’s mCIT trial (Modified Constraint Induced Therapy).The following compares a few of the main components of Dr. Wolf’s CIMT and Dr. Page’s mCIT:
| CIMT | mCIT | |
| Location | clinic | home |
| Hours of Daily Therapy | 6 hours* | 0.5 hours |
| Duration of Therapy | 3-6 weeks | 10 weeks |
| Daily Arm Restraint** | 9 hours/day for 2 weeks | 5 hours/day for 5 days/week for 10 weeks |
| Benefit to Patient | Statistically Significant: refer to article |
Statistically Significant: refer to article |
* patients experiencing fatigue are not be required to complete 6 hours/day
** CIMT and mCIT require that patients restrain their less affected limb for periods of time during the day.
June 17, 2009
More from the Press Release
The AHFMR (Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research) has posted the press release on their website. Here are some more videos:
Arthur Prochazka explains several ReJoyce functions
Ginny Bockman uses the ReJoyce before Press Conference
ReJoyce Press Release at the University of Alberta
Today, University of Alberta researchers Arthur Prochazka and Jan Kowalczewski released the results of their recent ReJoyce clinical trial involving people who have suffered a spinal cord injury. Also present at the conference via video Skype was Mary Galea, head of several ReJoyce-based clinical trials currently underway in Australia funded by the Victoria Neurotrauma Initiative. Here are some videos of the event:
Jan Kowalczewski, co-inventor of ReJoyce, gives an interview for CBC in French
Mary Galea talks about Australian Study for Spinal Cord Injury
June 15, 2009
Rick Hansen Wheels in Motion
Rick Hansen Wheels in Motion, a Canadian fund raising organization, recently provided funding for Jennifer Gabrysh to participate in a telerehabilitation trial involving ReJoyce trial at the University of Alberta. Here’s an excerpt from the article:
“- Regina native Jennifer Gabrysh was able to participate in a research study being conducted at the University of Alberta to validate a technology that will allow tetraplegics to maximize their hand function.”
You can read the full article here.
April 22, 2009
ReJoyce and Electrical Stimulation Study
The University of Alberta (Edmonton, Canada) is still recruiting subjects for a Phase III study of ReJoyce in combination with an electrical nerve stimulator for the hand. They use our ReJoyce Telehomecare System to enable supervision of a home-based rehabilitation protocol. The study is recruiting subjects suffering quadriplegia as a result of SCI (Spinal Cord Injury).
For more information about the study, click here.
April 17, 2009
Online Care and the Reduction of Health Care Costs
A study released in September, 2008 suggests that online health care services may reduce the cost of employer-sponsored health plans. The study suggests that savings could lie between $3.36 and $6.95 per member, per month.
Other studies, like this one and this one, have also demonstrated that telehomecare could lower the overall cost of healthcare significantly.