4.7 Article

Hand Ownership Is Altered in Teenagers with Unilateral Cerebral Palsy

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE
Volume 11, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jcm11164869

Keywords

cerebral palsy; hemiplegia; teenager; body ownership; rubber hand illusion; proprioceptive drift

Funding

  1. la Fondation Paralysie Cerebrale (Paris, France)
  2. Anna Muller Grocholski Stiftung (Zurich, Switzerland)

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This study explored hand ownership in teenagers with unilateral cerebral palsy compared with typically developing teenagers. The findings suggest that teenagers with UCP have altered hand ownership and a distorted subjective experience, which may be related to early dysfunction in complex sensory-motor integration. Hand ownership may influence motor impairment and could serve as a target for early intervention.
We explored hand ownership in teenagers with unilateral cerebral palsy (UCP) compared with typically developing teenagers. Eighteen participants with UCP and 16 control teenagers participated. We used the rubber hand illusion to test hand ownership (HO). Both affected/non-affected hands (UCP) and dominant/non-dominant hands (controls) were tested during synchronous and asynchronous strokes. HO was assessed by measuring the proprioceptive drift toward the fake hand (as a percentage of arm length) and conducting a questionnaire on subjective HO. Both groups had significantly higher proprioceptive drift in the synchronous stroking condition for both hands. Teenagers with UCP showed a significantly higher proprioceptive drift when comparing their paretic hand (median 3.4% arm length) with the non-dominant hand of the controls (median 1.7% arm length). The questionnaires showed that synchronous versus asynchronous stroking generated a robust change in subjective HO in the control teenagers, but not in the teenagers with UCP. Teenagers with UCP have an altered sense of HO and a distorted subjective experience of HO that may arise from the early dysfunction of complex sensory-motor integration related to their brain lesions. HO may influence motor impairment and prove to be a target for early intervention.

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