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Kinematic changes following robotic-assisted upper extremity rehabilitation in children with hemiplegia : dosage effects on movement time

Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / Background: Rehabilitation Robotics (RR) has become a more widely used and better
understood treatment intervention and research tool in the last 15 years. Traditional
research involves pre and post-test outcomes, making it difficult to analyze changes in
behavior during the treatment process. Harnessing kinematics captured throughout each
treatment allows motor learning to be quantified and questions of application and dosing
to be answered.
Objective: The aims of this secondary analysis were: (i) to investigate the impact of
treatment presentation during RR on upper extremity movement time (mt) in children
with hemiplegic cerebral palsy (CP) and (ii) to investigate the impact of training structure
(dose and intensity) on mt in children with CP participating in RR.
Methods: Subjects completed 16 intervention sessions of RR (2 x week; 8 weeks) with a
total of 1,024 repetitions of movement per session and three assessments: pre, post and 6
month f/u. During each assessment and intervention, subjects completed “one-way
record” assessments tracking performance on a planar task without robotic assistance.
Kinematics from these records were extracted to assess subject performance over the
course of and within sessions.
Results: For all participants, a significant decrease in mt was found at post-test and
follow-up. No significant differences were found in mt for age, severity or group
placement. A significant interaction was found between treatment day, block and group
(p = .033). Significant mt differences were found between the three blocks of intervention within individual days (p = .001). Specifically, significant differences were
found over the last block of treatment (p = .032) and between successive treatment days
(p = .001).
Conclusion: The results indicate that for children with CP participating in RR, the
number of repetitions per session is important. We hypothesized that children’s
performance would plateau during a treatment day as attention waned, the opposite
proved to be true. Despite the high-number of repetitions and associated cognitive
demand, subjects’ performance actually trended upwards throughout the 1,024 repetitions
suggesting that children were able to tolerate and learn from a high volume of repetitions.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:IUPUI/oai:scholarworks.iupui.edu:1805/17241
Date30 April 2018
CreatorsCardinal, Ryan Edward
ContributorsAltenburger, Peter, Fuchs, Robyn, Massie, Crystal, Warden, Stuart
Source SetsIndiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation

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