Brady Kathleen, Garcia Teressa
Department of Clinical Neuropsychology, Kennedy Krieger Institute, 707 North Broadway, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Dev Disabil Res Rev. 2009;15(2):102-11. doi: 10.1002/ddrr.59.
The purpose of this article is to describe theoretical and research bases for constraint-induced movement therapy (CIMT), to discuss key features and variations in protocols currently in use with children, and to review the results of studies of efficacy. CIMT has been found to be an effective intervention for increasing functional use of the hemiparetic upper extremity in adults with chronic disability from stroke. CIMT developed out of behavioral research on the phenomenon of "learned nonuse" of an upper extremity, commonly observed following sensory and/or motor CNS injury, in which failure to regain use persists even after a period of partial recovery. CIMT includes three key elements: (1) constraining the use of the less-impaired upper extremity (UE); (2) intensive, repetitive daily therapist-directed practice of motor movements with the impaired UE for an extended period (2-3 weeks); and (3) shaping of more complex action patterns through a process of rewarding successive approximations to the target action. Mechanisms responsible for success are thought to be separate but complementary, that is, operant conditioning (reversal of learned nonuse) and experience-driven cortical reorganization. CIMT has recently been extended to children with hemiparesis secondary to perinatal stroke or other CNS pathology. Numerous case studies, as well as a small number of randomized controlled or controlled clinical trials have reported substantial gains in functional use of the hemiplegic UE following CIMT with children. Protocols vary widely in terms of type of constraint used, intensity and duration of training, and outcome measures. In general, all report gains in functional use, with minimal or no adverse effects. Continued research is needed, to clarify optimal protocol parameters and to further understand mechanisms of efficacy.
本文旨在描述强制性运动疗法(CIMT)的理论和研究基础,讨论目前在儿童中使用的方案的关键特征和变化,并回顾疗效研究的结果。已发现CIMT是一种有效的干预措施,可增加患有中风所致慢性残疾的成年人偏瘫上肢的功能使用。CIMT源于对上肢“习得性废用”现象的行为研究,这种现象常见于感觉和/或运动中枢神经系统损伤后,即使经过一段时间的部分恢复,仍无法恢复使用。CIMT包括三个关键要素:(1)限制使用功能较好的上肢(UE);(2)在治疗师指导下,对受损上肢进行强化、重复的日常运动练习,持续较长时间(2-3周);(3)通过奖励逐步接近目标动作的过程,塑造更复杂的动作模式。成功的机制被认为是相互独立但又相互补充的,即操作性条件反射(习得性废用的逆转)和经验驱动的皮质重组。CIMT最近已扩展到因围产期中风或其他中枢神经系统病变导致偏瘫的儿童。大量的病例研究以及少数随机对照或对照临床试验报告称,对儿童进行CIMT后,偏瘫上肢的功能使用有显著改善。方案在使用的约束类型、训练强度和持续时间以及结果测量方面差异很大。总体而言,所有报告都显示功能使用有所改善,且副作用最小或没有副作用。需要继续进行研究,以明确最佳方案参数,并进一步了解疗效机制。