Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, Texas Neurorehabilitation Research Laboratory, TIRR Memorial Hermann Hospital, Houston, Texas.
Rehabilitation Unit, Houston Methodist Hospital, Houston, Texas Clinical Rehabilitation Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College, Houston Methodist Hospital, Houston, Texas.
Top Stroke Rehabil. 2014 Jan-Feb;21(1):33-9. doi: 10.1310/tsr2101-33.
The Borg Rating of Perceived Exertion (RPE) scale is widely used for many patient populations, but the ability of patients to accurately report their RPE without visual feedback has not been studied.
The objective was to determine whether the Borg scale could be used as a measure of perceived isometric exertion in healthy subjects and patients with stroke.
In experiment 1, young healthy subjects (n = 15) were instructed to perform spontaneous pushes (ie, self-selected effort) without visual feedback and to produce and hold self-determined isometric finger flexion at 5 Borg levels without visual feedback. In experiment 2, subjects with chronic stroke (n = 10) were instructed to produce self-determined isometric elbow flexion at 4 perceptual levels on the impaired and nonimpaired sides.
In experiment 1, young healthy subjects, asked to self-select without visual feedback (spontaneous push), tended to exert at a "somewhat hard" level, about 12% of maximal voluntary contraction (MVC). Self-selection of forces ranged from 2% of MVC (ie, very light) to 39% of MVC (ie, very hard). In experiment 2, subjects with stroke were able to distinguish different levels of perceived exertion among light (19% MVC), somewhat hard (33% MVC), and hard (63% MVC) levels; this ability was not different for the impaired and nonimpaired limbs.
Both healthy subjects and subjects with stroke are able to differentiate distinct levels of perceived exertion during isometric force when prompted with the Borg scale. Efforts at lower percentages of MVC are perceived by subjects with stroke as greater-than-normal Borg RPE levels.
Borg 感知用力评分(RPE)量表被广泛应用于许多患者群体,但患者在没有视觉反馈的情况下准确报告 RPE 的能力尚未得到研究。
本研究旨在确定 Borg 量表是否可用于测量健康受试者和脑卒中患者的等长感知用力。
在实验 1 中,年轻健康受试者(n=15)被要求在没有视觉反馈的情况下进行自发推动(即自我选择的用力),并在没有视觉反馈的情况下在 5 个 Borg 等级上产生并保持自我决定的等长手指屈曲。在实验 2 中,慢性脑卒中患者(n=10)被要求在受损和未受损侧以 4 个知觉等级产生自我决定的等长肘部屈曲。
在实验 1 中,年轻健康受试者在没有视觉反馈的情况下(自发推动)自我选择用力,用力程度倾向于“有些困难”,约为最大自主收缩(MVC)的 12%。自我选择的力范围从 2%的 MVC(即非常轻)到 39%的 MVC(即非常困难)。在实验 2 中,脑卒中患者能够区分轻度(19%MVC)、中度(33%MVC)和重度(63%MVC)感知用力水平之间的差异;这种能力在受损和未受损肢体之间没有差异。
健康受试者和脑卒中患者在等长力时,当被 Borg 量表提示时,都能够区分不同的感知用力水平。脑卒中患者在较低的 MVC 百分比下的用力被感知为大于正常的 Borg RPE 水平。