4.3 Article

Usage of RePlay as a Take-Home System to Support High-Repetition Motor Rehabilitation After Neurological Injury

Journal

GAMES FOR HEALTH JOURNAL
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages 73-85

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/g4h.2022.0118

Keywords

Games; Neurological disorders; Rehabilitation; Recovery; Telehealth systems

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Stroke is a leading cause of chronic motor disability, but patients often face barriers in accessing optimal rehabilitative care. To address this, a system called RePlay was developed to facilitate at-home rehabilitative exercises in a gameplay environment using consumer technology. A feasibility study found that RePlay has the potential to increase engagement in rehabilitative exercises and improve overall patient outcomes.
Stroke is a leading cause of chronic motor disability. While physical rehabilitation can promote functional recovery, several barriers prevent patients from receiving optimal rehabilitative care. Easy access to at-home rehabilitative tools could increase patients' ability to participate in rehabilitative exercises, which may lead to improved outcomes. Toward achieving this goal, we developed RePlay: a novel system that facilitates unsupervised rehabilitative exercises at home. RePlay leverages available consumer technology to provide a simple tool that allows users to perform common rehabilitative exercises in a gameplay environment. RePlay collects quantitative time series force and movement data from handheld devices, which provide therapists the ability to quantify gains and individualize rehabilitative regimens. RePlay was developed in C# using Visual Studio. In this feasibility study, we assessed whether participants with neurological injury are capable of using the RePlay system in both a supervised in-office setting and an unsupervised at-home setting, and we assessed their adherence to the unsupervised at-home rehabilitation assignment. All participants were assigned a set of 18 games and exercises to play each day. Participants produced on average 698 +/- 36 discrete movements during the initial 1 hour in-office visit. A subset of participants who used the system at home produced 1593 +/- 197 discrete movements per day. Participants demonstrated a high degree of engagement while using the system at home, typically completing nearly double the number of assigned exercises per day. These findings indicate that the open-source RePlay system may be a feasible tool to facilitate access to rehabilitative exercises and potentially improve overall patient outcomes.

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