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This study is aimed to test the efficacy and feasibility of an immersive virtual reality (VR) rehabilitation programs to improve upper-limb motor functions in 24 patients with multiple sclerosis (pwMS), characterized by moderate to severe upper-limb motor dysfunctions. In particular, this study will evaluate the efficacy of VR as novel opportunities to increase treatment engagement and rehabilitation effects.
The effectiveness of the rehabilitation program will be assessed using both clinical tests and state-of-the art motion capture system for human movement analysis.
Full description
Recent studies highlighted the high social and economic burden of rehabilitation in multiple sclerosis (MS); in fact its cost is approximately 27% of the overall expenses supported by the national health system. In particular, it has been shown that the physical rehabilitation is effective in treating functional impairments associated to gait, balance and daily life activitites. However, most rehabilitative treatments are performed at hospital or in specialized centers, and this is a factor which strongly reduces the persistence of the positive effects in the long-term.
In this context, it appears important to highlight that rehabilitative treatments are often focused on lower limbs functional impairments, while upper limbs dysfunctions seem less considered although approximately 50% of pwMS complain about issues like reduction of manual dexterity and fine motor abilities as well as movements' slowness. Moreover, significantly lower is also the number of the studies focused on upper limbs rehabilitation, if compared to those about walking or balance and also if compared with upper limbs studies in other neurologic diseases like stroke.
A support in overcoming such issues might be provided by the adoption of low-cost devices originally designed for entertainment purposes (e.g. Nintendo Wii or Microsoft Kinect) which have been shown effective in improving some aspects of disability. Nevertheless, while rehabilitation protocols which make use of such system often relies on software designed for healthy individuals, it should be essential to have available routines specifically designed for the MS needs.
On the basis of these considerations, this project intends to design, develop and test an innovative low-cost hardware/software platform for home-based upper limbs rehabilitation based on virtual reality.
In particular, the software will reproduce scenarios of actual daily living activities with increasing complexity to ensure a good degree of transferability of the training into real life.
The strength of this approach lies basically on three factors:
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24 participants in 2 patient groups
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Massimiliano Pau, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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