Department of Psychology, University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB), Birmingham, AL, USA.
Department of Physical Therapy, UAB, Birmingham, AL, USA.
Restor Neurol Neurosci. 2021;39(4):303-318. doi: 10.3233/RNN-201100.
Although Constraint-Induced Movement therapy (CIMT) has been deemed efficacious for adults with persistent, mild-to-moderate, post-stroke upper-extremity hemiparesis, CIMT is not available on a widespread clinical basis. Impediments include its cost and travel to multiple therapy appointments. To overcome these barriers, we developed an automated, tele-health form of CIMT.
Determine whether in-home, tele-health CIMT has outcomes as good as in-clinic, face-to-face CIMT in adults ≥1-year post-stroke with mild-to-moderate upper-extremity hemiparesis.
Twenty-four stroke patients with chronic upper-arm extremity hemiparesis were randomly assigned to tele-health CIMT (Tele-AutoCITE) or in-lab CIMT. All received 35 hours of treatment. In the tele-health group, an automated, upper-extremity workstation with built-in sensors and video cameras was set-up in participants' homes. Internet-based audio-visual and data links permitted supervision of treatment by a trainer in the lab.
Ten patients in each group completed treatment. All twenty, on average, showed very large improvements immediately afterwards in everyday use of the more-affected arm (mean change on Motor Activity Log Arm Use scale = 2.5 points, p < 0.001, d' = 3.1). After one-year, a large improvement from baseline was still present (mean change = 1.8, p < 0.001, d' = 2). Post-treatment outcomes in the tele-health group were not inferior to those in the in-lab group. Neither were participants' perceptions of satisfaction with and difficulty of the interventions. Although everyday arm use was similar in the two groups after one-year (mean difference = -0.1, 95% CI = -1.3-1.0), reductions in the precision of the estimates of this parameter due to drop-out over follow-up did not permit ruling out that the tele-health group had an inferior long-term outcome.
This proof-of-concept study suggests that Tele-AutoCITE produces immediate benefits that are equivalent to those after in-lab CIMT in stroke survivors with chronic upper-arm extremity hemiparesis. Cost savings possible with this tele-health approach remain to be evaluated.
尽管强制性运动疗法(CIMT)已被证明对患有持续性、轻度至中度、中风后上肢偏瘫的成年人有效,但 CIMT 在广泛的临床基础上不可用。障碍包括其成本和多次治疗预约的旅行。为了克服这些障碍,我们开发了一种自动化的远程医疗形式的 CIMT。
确定在家中进行远程医疗 CIMT 是否与在中风后 1 年以上、上肢轻度至中度偏瘫的成年人中进行的临床面对面 CIMT 一样有效。
24 名慢性上肢偏瘫的中风患者被随机分配到远程医疗 CIMT(Tele-AutoCITE)或实验室 CIMT。所有人都接受了 35 小时的治疗。在远程医疗组中,在参与者的家中设置了一个带有内置传感器和摄像机的自动化上肢工作站。基于互联网的视听和数据链接允许实验室中的培训师监督治疗。
每组有 10 名患者完成了治疗。所有 20 名患者平均在更受影响的手臂的日常使用中立即出现了非常大的改善(运动活动日志手臂使用量表的平均变化为 2.5 分,p < 0.001,d'=3.1)。一年后,仍存在从基线开始的较大改善(平均变化=1.8,p < 0.001,d'=2)。远程医疗组的治疗后结果并不逊于实验室组。参与者对干预措施的满意度和难度的看法也没有差异。尽管两组患者在一年后日常生活手臂使用情况相似(平均差异=-0.1,95%CI=-1.3-1.0),但由于随访期间的脱落导致该参数的估计精度降低,不能排除远程医疗组的长期结果较差。
这项概念验证研究表明,Tele-AutoCITE 可立即产生与中风幸存者慢性上肢偏瘫患者在实验室 CIMT 后相同的益处。使用这种远程医疗方法可能会节省成本,仍有待评估。