Rehabilitation of arm function after stroke. Literature review

L Oujamaa, I Relave, J Froger, D Mottet, J-Y Pelissier

Unité de rééducation et réadaptation neurologique, département de MPR, hôpital Carémeau, centre médical Le-Grau-du-Roi, place Robert-Debré, 30029 Nîmes cedex 04, France; UFR STAPS, laboratoire efficience et déficience motrice EA 2991 et institut fédératif de recherche sur le handicap (IFR 25), université de Montpellier-I, 700, avenue du Pic-St-Loup, 34090 Montpellier, France.

Annals of physical and rehabilitation medicine 04/2009; DOI: 10.1016/j.rehab.2008.10.003

Journal Article

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: In the recent literature we can find many articles dealing with upper extremity rehabilitation in stroke patients. New techniques, still under evaluation, are becoming the practical applications for the concept of post-stroke brain plasticity. METHODS: This literature review focuses on controlled randomized studies, reviews and meta-analyses published in the English language from 2004 to 2008. The research was conducted in MEDLINE with the following keywords: "upper limb", "stroke", "rehabilitation". RESULTS: We reviewed 66 studies. The main therapeutic strategies are: activation of the ipsilesional motor cortex, inhibition of the contralesional motor cortex and modulation of the sensory afferents. Keeping a cortical representation of the upper limb distal extremity could prevent the learned non-use phenomenon. The modulation of sensory afferents is then proposed: distal cutaneous electrostimulation, anesthesia of the healthy limb, mirror therapy, virtual reality. Intensifying the rehabilitation care means increasing the total hours of rehabilitation dedicated to the paretic limb (proprioceptive stimulation and repetitive movements). This specific rehabilitation is facilitated by robot-aided therapy in the active-assisted mode, neuromuscular electrostimulation and bilateral task training. Intensifying the rehabilitation training program significantly improves the arm function outcome when performed during subacute stroke rehabilitation (< six months). Ipsilesional neurostimulation as well as mental practice optimize the effect of repetitive gestures for slight motor impairments. Contralesional neurostimulation or anesthesia of the healthy hand both improve the paretic hand's dexterity via a decrease of the transcallosal inhibition. This pathophysiological mechanism could also explain the positive impact of constraint-induced movement therapy (CI therapy) in an environmental setting for chronic stroke patients. CONCLUSION: To ensure a positive functional outcome, stroke rehabilitation programs are based on task-oriented repetitive training. This literature review shows that exercising the hemiparetic hand and wrist is essential in all stages of a stroke rehabilitation program. New data stemming from neurosciences suggest that ipsilesional corticospinal excitability should be a priority.

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Keywords

contralesional motor cortex
 
distal cutaneous electrostimulation
 
ipsilesional corticospinal excitability
 
ipsilesional motor cortex
 
main therapeutic strategies
 
New data
 
paretic hand's dexterity
 
positive functional outcome
 
positive impact
 
post-stroke brain plasticity
 
practical applications
 
rehabilitation care
 
slight motor impairments
 
specific rehabilitation
 
stroke rehabilitation program
 
stroke rehabilitation programs
 
subacute stroke rehabilitation
 
upper extremity rehabilitation
 
upper limb distal extremity
 
virtual reality