Tetraplegia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Reach and Palmar Grasp in Tetraplegics With Neuromuscular Electrical Stimulation: Assessment and Training.
The aim of the study was to evaluate the tetraplegics movement strategies, assisted by Neuromuscular Electrical Stimulation (NMES), on the reach and palmar (RP) grasp to different weights objects.Tetraplegics had their RP grasp movement captured by four infrared cameras and 6-reflexive markers attached on the trunk and right arm, assisted or not by NMES, in the triceps, extensor carpi radialis longus, extensor digitorum communis, flexor digitorum superficialis, opponens pollicis and lumbricalis muscles. The grasp was made in three cylindrical objects (different diameters and weights) placed in trunk midline in an equivalent distance of the arm's length. The patients were able to reach and made palmar grasp in all cylinders using the stimulation sequences assisted by NMES.
Prior to the kinematic captures, all patients selected in the study received 20 sessions of
NMES therapy, twice a week, with 10 weeks of duration. The strengthening sessions plus
training prior to the kinematic study of movement strategies has the objective to condition
the paretic muscles to the functional activity.
Twenty sessions was divided in 10 sessions of strengthening and 10 sessions of the
functional training of reaching and grasping assisted with electrical stimulation.
The strengthening sessions consisted of 20 minutes of electrical stimulation on triceps,
extensor carpi radialis longus, extensor digitorum communis, lumbricalis, flexor digitorum
superficialis and opponens pollicis muscles.
The functional training sessions was performed through movements the reach and palmar grasp
with NMES of the several cylindrical and conical objects of different weights (30 minutes
sessions). The NMES was used to facilitate movements of reach (triceps muscle), opening
(extensor carpi radialis longus and extensor digitorum communis muscle), positioning
(extensor carpi radialis longus, flexor digitorum superficialis and lumbricalis muscle),
palmar grasp (extensor carpi radialis longus, flexor digitorum superficialis, opponens
pollicis muscle) and releasing (extensor carpi radialis longus and extensor digitorum
communis muscle). Since the temporal organization varied among tetraplegics, some of them
required more time to some stages of the sequence.
For NMES, the eight-channel stimulator, controlled by a microcomputer was used with pulse
frequency, 25 Hz; pulse duration, 300 milliseconds; on/off duration 2/2sec; maximum pulse
width fixed at 250 microampere, and the amplitude individually adjusted to achieve the
excitability threshold for each muscle. The amplitude was adjusted throughout the training,
in order to produce the desired muscle contraction. This parameters was used in all of
therapies and in the kinematic assessment. The stimulation was applied with self-adhesive
surface electrodes taped to the skin.
For kinematic captures, the participants performed reach and grasp with the dominant arm
(right), assisted and not assisted by NMES. The subjects had no restriction for trunk
anterior shifting but for safety reasons were kept seating upright in their own daily use
wheelchair (the one they were more adapted to) and the non-dominant arm (left) was left
resting over the abdomen in an attempt to minimize the influence of the non evaluated member
on postural control.
For the initial position, the dominant arm was held at the side of the trunk, with the elbow
flexed at 90º and the forearm in neutral position on the table. Tetraplegic subjects were
seated in front of a task-table with the cylinder on it. They were instructed to reach and
grasp three different cylinders (object A :200g weight, 115 mm height, 40 mm diameter;
object B: 270g, 115 mm e 50 mm; and object C: 480g, 115 mm e 60 mm), one at a time and bring
it to the initial hand position.
The analysis of kinematic data was performed from the beginning of the movement (starting
position), until the early return of hand position (with or without the cylinder). The
cylinder was positioned in front of the subject sternum, with a distance equal to the arm's
length (from the medial border of axilla to the distal wrist crease).
The subjects were asked to perform five repetitions of each task for all three cylinders, in
a total of 15 repetitions assisted and 15 not assisted by NMES. Once the experiment started,
the subject could not touch the table with the forearm, until the task was finished. The
command used to start the experiment was "GO", and they were instructed to perform the
movement naturally and not to worry about the velocity and time of duration. Patients were
evaluated in the two situations (with and without NMES) with stimulation electrodes placed
in the skin surface and the cables connected to the stimulator.
;
Allocation: Non-Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Subject), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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