Tyson Sarah F, Kent Ruth M
Centre for Rehabilitation & Human Performance Research, University of Salford, Frederick Road Campus, Salford, UK, M6 6PU.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2009 Jul 8;2009(3):CD003694. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD003694.pub3.
Post-stroke motor impairments cause difficulty controlling the joints of the affected limbs to produce useful movements. One way to manage this to use an orthosis to control the movement of the affected joints but evidence for their benefit is lacking.
To determine the effectiveness of upper or lower limb orthoses on activity and impairment in people with stroke and other non-progressive brain lesions.
In February 2007 we searched the trials registers of the Cochrane Stroke, Movement Disorders and Injuries Groups, the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (The Cochrane Library Issue 1, 2007), MEDLINE (from 1966), EMBASE (from 1980), CINAHL (from 1983), AMED (from 1985), PsycINFO (from 1967) and RECAL (from 1990), and other databases and trials registers. We screened reference lists, contacted lead authors and other researchers in the field.
We included randomised controlled trials of orthoses applied to the upper or lower limb in people with stroke and other non-progressive brain lesions.
Two review authors independently identified trials, extracted data, and assessed trial quality. Results for continuous outcomes were combined and analysed using mean difference or standardised mean difference, both with 95% confidence intervals and fixed-effect model.
We analysed 14 trials with 429 participants. The overall effect of lower limb orthoses on walking disability (speed), walking impairment (step/stride length) and balance impairment (weight distribution in standing) was significant and beneficial. There was no significant effect on postural sway (balance impairment) or mobility disability but the numbers of studies and participants were low. However, these were all cross-over trials that looked at the immediate effect while wearing the orthosis; they did not assess the effects of wearing an orthosis over the long term. Upper limb orthoses showed no effect on upper limb function, range of movement at the wrist, fingers or thumb, nor pain. However, this was based on only three trials.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: A lower limb orthosis can improve walking and balance but the included studies have only examined the immediate effects while wearing the orthosis; the effects of long-term use have not been investigated. An upper limb orthosis does not effect on upper limb function, range of movement at the wrist, fingers or thumb, nor pain, but this conclusion is based on only three trials.
中风后运动障碍导致难以控制患侧肢体关节以产生有效运动。解决这一问题的一种方法是使用矫形器来控制患侧关节的运动,但缺乏其益处的证据。
确定上肢或下肢矫形器对中风及其他非进行性脑损伤患者的活动能力和功能障碍的有效性。
2007年2月,我们检索了Cochrane中风、运动障碍和损伤小组、Cochrane系统评价数据库以及Cochrane对照试验中央注册库(2007年第1期《Cochrane图书馆》)、MEDLINE(1966年起)、EMBASE(1980年起)、CINAHL(1983年起)、AMED(1985年起)、PsycINFO(1967年起)和RECAL(1990年起)以及其他数据库和试验注册库。我们筛选了参考文献列表,联系了该领域的主要作者和其他研究人员。
我们纳入了针对中风及其他非进行性脑损伤患者上肢或下肢应用矫形器的随机对照试验。
两位综述作者独立识别试验、提取数据并评估试验质量。连续结局的结果进行合并,并使用均数差或标准化均数差进行分析,两者均带有95%置信区间和固定效应模型。
我们分析了14项试验,共429名参与者。下肢矫形器对步行障碍(速度)、步行功能障碍(步幅/步长)和平衡功能障碍(站立时体重分布)的总体效果显著且有益。对姿势摆动(平衡功能障碍)或移动障碍没有显著影响,但研究数量和参与者数量较少。然而,这些都是交叉试验,观察的是佩戴矫形器时的即时效果;它们未评估长期佩戴矫形器的效果。上肢矫形器对上肢功能、手腕、手指或拇指的活动范围以及疼痛均无影响。然而,这仅基于三项试验。
下肢矫形器可改善步行和平衡,但纳入的研究仅考察了佩戴矫形器时的即时效果;长期使用的效果尚未进行研究。上肢矫形器对上肢功能、手腕、手指或拇指的活动范围以及疼痛均无影响,但这一结论仅基于三项试验。