Abstract

Multidomain instrumental evaluation of post-stroke chronic patients, coupled with standard clinical assessments, has rarely been exploited in the literature. Such an approach may be valuable to provide comprehensive insight regarding patients’ status, as well as orienting the rehabilitation therapies. Therefore, we propose a multidomain analysis including clinically compliant methods as electroencephalography (EEG), electromyography (EMG), kinematics, and clinical scales. The framework of upper-limb robot-assisted rehabilitation is selected as a challenging and promising scenario to test the multi-parameter evaluation, with the aim to assess whether and in which domains modifications may take place. Instrumental recordings and clinical scales were administered before and after a month of intensive robotic therapy of the impaired upper limb, on five post-stroke chronic hemiparetic patients. After therapy, all patients showed clinical improvement and presented pre/post modifications in one or several of the other domains as well. All patients performed the motor task in a smoother way; two of them appeared to change their muscle synergies activation strategies, and most subjects showed variations in their brain activity, both in the ipsi- and contralateral hemispheres. Changes highlighted by the new multiparametric instrumental approach suggest a recovery trend in agreement with clinical scales. In addition, by jointly demonstrating lateralization of brain activations, changes in muscle recruitment and the execution of smoother trajectories, the new approach may help distinguish between true functional recovery and the adoption of suboptimal compensatory strategies. In the light of these premises, the multi-domain approach may allow a finer patient characterization, providing a deeper insight into the mechanisms underlying the relearning procedure and the level (neuro/muscular) at which it occurred, at a relatively low expenditure. The role of this quantitative description in defining a personalized treatment strategy is of great interest and should be addressed in future studies.

Highlights

  • Stroke is the leading cause of acquired long-term disability [1]

  • All patients could perform the complete clinical trial, each one according to his motor functionality

  • For Fugl–Meyer Assessment (FMA), all patients gained at least 1 point, with a maximum pre-post difference of 9 points

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Summary

Introduction

25% to 75% require help or are fully dependent in activities of daily living [2]. The acute phase following the event requires prompt and specialized care to minimize the impairment to both the somatosensory and motor areas. The chronic phase may benefit from rehabilitation as well [3,4,5]. The rehabilitation after stroke is not guided by an established standard protocol; treatment programs vary in duration, intensity, and frequency [6]. A key factor in the rehabilitation process is the evaluation of the improvements gained during the therapy. The most widely used methods of assessment are clinical scales (physical/cognitive tests or self-reported questionnaires). Some of the most exploited and reliable clinical scales in stroke are the

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