Effects of Constraint-Induced Movement Therapy on Patients With Chronic Motor Deficits After Stroke
- 1 March 1999
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Stroke
- Vol. 30 (3) , 586-592
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.str.30.3.586
Abstract
Constraint-induced movement therapy (CI therapy) has previously been shown to produce large improvements in actual amount of use of a more affected upper extremity in the "real-world" environment in patients with chronic stroke (ie, >1 year after the event). This work was carried out in an American laboratory. Our aim was to determine whether these results could be replicated in another laboratory located in Germany, operating within the context of a healthcare system in which administration of conventional types of physical therapy is generally more extensive than in the United States. Fifteen chronic stroke patients were given CI therapy, involving restriction of movement of the intact upper extremity by placing it in a sling for 90% of waking hours for 12 days and training (by shaping) of the more affected extremity for 7 hours on the 8 weekdays during that period. Patients showed a significant and very large degree of improvement from before to after treatment on a laboratory motor test and on a test assessing amount of use of the affected extremity in activities of daily living in the life setting (effect sizes, 0.9 and 2.2, respectively), with no decrement in performance at 6-month follow-up. During a pretreatment control test-retest interval, there were no significant changes on these tests. Results replicate in Germany the findings with CI therapy in an American laboratory, suggesting that the intervention has general applicability.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Motor cortex plasticity during constraint-induced movement therapy in stroke patientsNeuroscience Letters, 1998
- Constraint-induced movement therapy: A new approach to treatment in physical rehabilitation.Rehabilitation Psychology, 1998
- The arm motor ability test: Reliability, validity, and sensitivity to change of an instrument for assessing disabilities in activities of daily livingArchives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 1997
- Synthesis of Intervention Trials To Improve Motor Recovery following StrokeTopics in Stroke Rehabilitation, 1997
- Repetitive training of isolated movements improves the outcome of motor rehabilitation of the centrally paretic handJournal of the Neurological Sciences, 1995
- Restoration of gait in nonambulatory hemiparetic patients by treadmill training with partial body-weight supportArchives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 1994
- Forced use of hemiplegic upper extremities to reverse the effect of learned nonuse among chronic stroke and head-injured patientsExperimental Neurology, 1989
- SROKE RECOVERY: HE CAN BUT DOES HE?Rheumatology, 1979
- The shaping game: A teaching techniqueBehavior Therapy, 1974