4.6 Article

The Contribution of Kinematics in the Assessment of Upper Limb Motor Recovery Early After Stroke

Journal

NEUROREHABILITATION AND NEURAL REPAIR
Volume 28, Issue 1, Pages 4-12

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1545968313498514

Keywords

stroke; kinematics; reaching; clinical assessment; upper limb; motor recovery

Funding

  1. Nimes University Hospital [EudraCT: 2009-A00872-55]
  2. European SKILLS project [FP6 IST 035005]
  3. MoJOS [092930679]

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Background. Kinematic assessment of upper limb motor recovery after stroke may be related to clinical scores while being more sensitive and reliable than clinical evaluation alone. Objective. To identify the potential of kinematics in assessing upper limb recovery early poststroke. Methods. Thirteen patients were included within 1 month poststroke and evaluated once a week for 6 weeks and at 3 months with (a) the Fugl-Meyer Assessment (FMA) and (b) kinematic analysis of reach-to-grasp movements. The link between clinical and kinematic data was identified using mixed model with random coefficient analysis. Results. Movement time, trajectory length, directness, smoothness, mean and maximum velocity of the hand were sensitive to change over time and distinguished between movements of paretic, nonparetic, and healthy control limbs. The FMA score increased with movement smoothness over time, explaining 62.5% of FMA variability. Conclusion. Kinematic analysis of reach-to-grasp movements is relevant to assess upper limb recovery early poststroke, and is linked to the FMA. Kinematics could provide more accurate real-time indicators of patients' recovery as compared with the sole use of clinical scores, although it remains challenging to establish the universality of the reaching model in relation to motor recovery after stroke.

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