Multisensory stimulation to promote upper extremity motor recovery in stroke: A pilot study

Author:

Law Lawla LF1ORCID,Fong Kenneth NK2,Li Ray KF3

Affiliation:

1. Assistant Professor, School of Medical and Health Sciences, Tung Wah College, Hong Kong SAR; Adjunct Senior Lecturer, Occupational Therapy Department, James Cook University, Australia

2. Associate Professor, Department of Rehabilitation Science, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong SAR

3. Adjunct Lecturer, School of Medical and Health Sciences, Tung Wah College, Hong Kong SAR

Abstract

Introduction Occupational therapists have been using various preparatory methods as part of the treatment sessions to prepare clients for occupational performance and participation in occupation. Studies have shown sensory stimulation both activates brain areas inducing cortical reorganization and modulates motor cortical excitability for the stimulated afferents, hence re-establishing the disrupted sensorimotor loop due to stroke. This pilot investigates the potential effects of using multisensory stimulation as a preparatory method prior to conventional training (CT) on upper-extremity motor recovery and self-care function in stroke patients. Method This was a quasi-randomized controlled pilot. Twelve participants (age in years = 67.17 + /−11.29) with upper extremity motor deficits were randomly allocated to multisensory therapy (n = 6) or conventional (n = 6) groups for 12-week training. Assessments were conducted at baseline and post-intervention using Fugl-Meyer Assessment of Motor Recovery after Stroke (FMA), Manual Muscle Testing (MMT), Functional Test for the Hemiplegic Upper Extremity (Hong Kong version FTHUE-HK) and Modified Barthel Index (MBI). Results Significant between-group differences were shown in FMA ( p = 0.003), FTHUE-HK ( p = 0.028) and MMT ( p = 0.034). Conclusion Multisensory stimulation could be used as a preparatory method prior to CT in improving upper extremity motor recovery in stroke rehabilitation. Further well-designed larger scale studies are needed to validate the potential benefits of this application.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Occupational Therapy

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