Effects of stochastic resonance stimulation on manual function in children with hemiplegic cerebral palsy: A pilot clinical trial

Autor: Jessica Lynn, Allison Wolf, Travis Bridges, Zachary Pottanat, Suzanne Spivey, Olivier Rolin
Rok vydání: 2022
Předmět:
Zdroj: PM&R. 15:302-313
ISSN: 1934-1563
1934-1482
DOI: 10.1002/pmrj.12788
Popis: To investigate the effect of stochastic resonance stimulation (SRS) on manual abilities in children with hemiplegic cerebral palsy.This pilot study is a randomized, sham-controlled, one-period, crossover trial.A neuroscience clinic with specialty therapy programs at an urban, university-based children's hospital.Sixteen children ages 3 to 16 years who were diagnosed with hemiplegic cerebral palsy and had hand Manual Abilities Classification scale score of I to III with sufficient cognitive abilities to follow instructions.Children donned wrist and arm bands that delivered SRS via embedded piezoelectric actuators in two randomly assigned conditions: sham (devices powered off) and subthreshold stimulation (SBT-SRS). Following the randomized protocol, a subset of participants also completed an open-label, above-threshold stimulation (AT-SRS) condition. Children carried out the same uni-manual and bimanual tasks during the randomized and open-label protocols; all data were collected in a single session.Box and Blocks (BB) test, a uni-manual function test, and the Shriners Hospital Upper Extremity Evaluation (SHUEE). The SHUEE was video recorded and scored by two raters who were blinded to the experimental condition.Thirteen children completed the BB task and 14 children completed the SHUEE. Children in the SBT-SRS condition relative to sham condition moved an average of 1.8 more blocks in 1 minute (p = .08); scored an average of 3 points higher on SHUEE spontaneous functional analysis (p .002); and scored an average of 2.7 points higher on SHUEE dynamic positional analysis (p = .20). In the open-label protocol, children in the AT-SRS condition relative to sham moved 3.9 more blocks than in the sham condition (n = 8, p .001); scored an average of 4.5 points higher on SHUEE spontaneous functional analysis (n = 6, p = .08); and scored an average of 10.5 points higher on SHUEE dynamic positional analysis (n = 6, p = .01).In this pilot study, we found preliminary evidence that children with hemiplegic cerebral palsy demonstrated improved uni-manual abilities and increased function of the impaired hand on bimanual tasks when receiving a single session of SBT-SRS. Preliminary evidence also suggests that some children with hemiplegic cerebral palsy may improve more when receiving a single session of AT-SRS. Future research using larger, controlled studies should evaluate the optimal intensity, duration, and long-term effect of SRS for improving impaired manual abilities.
Databáze: OpenAIRE