Sun Shanan, Fears Nicholas E, Miller Haylie L
School of Kinesiology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
School of Kinesiology, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA, USA.
Res Autism Spectr Disord. 2024 Oct;118. doi: 10.1016/j.rasd.2024.102489. Epub 2024 Oct 10.
Many autistic individuals exhibit clinically-significant motor difficulties. Previous reviews focused on overall motor ability or coordination, but with little attention paid to quantifying differences in upper extremity skills, which are critical to many activities of daily living. Our objective was to identify and evaluate the published literature on upper extremity motor skills of autistic people.
We conducted a literature search in PubMed, Scopus, and PsycInfo for empirical research articles reporting functional upper extremity movement performance in autism. We included articles reporting results of primary data collection from autistic people published before July 10, 2024. Articles were identified and data were extracted and evaluated using EndNote and Microsoft Excel by a team of three authors.
Our search strategy yielded 1181 unique articles. After screening these articles, the final sample included 43 empirical research articles focused on functional upper extremity movements, including pointing ( = 13), reaching to grasp ( = 18), and handwriting ( = 12) in autism. Across these skills, autistic people exhibited slower, more variable movements than their non-autistic counterparts.
Upper extremity movement differences in autism are likely the result of differences in motor planning and increased online monitoring of movement execution. Limitations and potential bias exist in the racial, ethnic, age, and gender diversity of available data, and in the variability of methods used to assess performance. However, the current body of literature suggests significant differences between autistic and non-autistic upper extremity movements. Slower, more variable upper extremity movements likely affect many functional difficulties experienced in autistic people's daily lives.
许多自闭症患者表现出具有临床意义的运动困难。以往的综述主要关注整体运动能力或协调性,但很少关注量化上肢技能的差异,而上肢技能对许多日常生活活动至关重要。我们的目的是识别和评估已发表的关于自闭症患者上肢运动技能的文献。
我们在PubMed、Scopus和PsycInfo中进行文献检索,以查找报告自闭症患者上肢功能运动表现的实证研究文章。我们纳入了2024年7月10日前发表的、报告从自闭症患者收集的原始数据结果的文章。由三位作者组成的团队使用EndNote和Microsoft Excel识别文章、提取数据并进行评估。
我们的检索策略产生了1181篇独特的文章。在筛选这些文章后,最终样本包括43篇专注于上肢功能运动的实证研究文章,包括自闭症患者的指物(n = 13)、伸手抓握(n = 18)和书写(n = 12)。在这些技能方面,自闭症患者的动作比非自闭症患者更慢、更不稳定。
自闭症患者上肢运动差异可能是运动计划差异和运动执行在线监测增加的结果。现有数据在种族、民族、年龄和性别多样性以及用于评估表现的方法的变异性方面存在局限性和潜在偏差。然而,目前的文献表明自闭症患者和非自闭症患者在上肢运动方面存在显著差异。上肢动作更慢、更不稳定可能会影响自闭症患者日常生活中遇到的许多功能困难。