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Movement Improvement After Paediatric Armeo®Spring Rehabilitation

I

IRCCS Eugenio Medea

Status

Completed

Conditions

Cerebral Palsy
Acquired Brain Injury

Treatments

Other: physiotherapy
Device: Upper limb robot-assisted rehabilitation

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03552614
05/2018-Oss

Details and patient eligibility

About

Children with acquired and congenital brain lesions (namely, cerebral palsy, CP, and acquired brain injury, ABI) may exhibit upper limb impairment, with consequent limitations in their daily living activities.

In recent years, robotic rehabilitation has become an important tool to promote functional recovery in patients with CP and ABI, thanks to its ability to promote high intensity, repetitive, engaging training. Moreover, it has additional advantages that can contribute to the understanding of the effectiveness of these devices in motor learning and recovery. It has indeed higher resolution and inter -rater and intra-rater reliability with respect to standard assessment methods (i.e. clinical scales). Furthermore, it is able to provide a quantitative evaluation of patients' movement during treatments instead of relying exclusively on qualitative observation. Recently, Merlo and co-workers (Sol et Salus, Rimini, Italy) developed and validated a tool to extract indices of accuracy, velocity and smoothness from the analysis of 3D trajectories of the end point of the robotic exoskeleton Armeo®Spring (Hocoma, CH).

The primary aim of the study is to retrospectively investigate the effectiveness of robot-assisted upper limb rehabilitation in children affected by congenital and acquired brain damages by means of funcional scales and quantitative assessment of movement performance (accuracy, velocity and smoothness).

Patients affected by acquired or congenital brain disease are enrolled. The inclusion criteria are: age between 5 and 18; the ability to handle objects in daily life within levels I, II, and III, according to the Manual Ability Classification System (MACS); the ability to understand and follow test instructions. Conversely, the exclusion criteria are: severe muscle contracture and/or spasticity, a diagnosis of severe learning disabilities or behavioral problems and visual or hearing difficulties that would impact on function and participation.

Participants undergo the standard intervention protocol followed at the IRCCS E. Medea. It is composed by 20 sessions with Armeo®Spring and 20 sessions of physiotherapy, within 1 month. Patients are evaluated before (T0) and after (T1) the intervention with the Quality of Upper Extremities Skills Test (QUEST) and the Melbourne Assessment of Unilateral Upper Limb Function. During the first, tenth and last training session, patients executed the "Vertical Capture" exergame, which assess patient's functional level during a task that involves elbow flex-extension and shoulder flex- extension and abd-adduction. From these evaluation sessions, quantitative indices of movement performance (precision, velocity and smoothness) are extracted.

Enrollment

43 patients

Sex

All

Ages

5 to 18 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • the ability to handle objects in daily life within levels I, II, and III, according to the Manual Ability Classification System (MACS);
  • the ability to understand and follow test instructions.

Exclusion criteria

  • severe muscle spasticity and/or contracture,
  • diagnosis of severe learning disabilities or behavioral problems
  • visual or hearing difficulties that would impact on function and participation

Trial design

43 participants in 1 patient group

children with brain damage
Description:
Patients undergo physiotherapy + Upper limb robot-assisted rehabilitation
Treatment:
Device: Upper limb robot-assisted rehabilitation
Other: physiotherapy

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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