Abstract

The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of a virtual reality program combined with conventional therapy in upper limb function in people with tetraplegia and to provide data about patients' satisfaction with the virtual reality system. Thirty-one people with subacute complete cervical tetraplegia participated in the study. Experimental group received 15 sessions with Toyra® virtual reality system for 5 weeks, 30 minutes/day, 3 days/week in addition to conventional therapy, while control group only received conventional therapy. All patients were assessed at baseline, after intervention, and at three-month follow-up with a battery of clinical, functional, and satisfaction scales. Control group showed significant improvements in the manual muscle test (p = 0,043, partial η 2 = 0,22) in the follow-up evaluation. Both groups demonstrated clinical, but nonsignificant, changes to their arm function in 4 of the 5 scales used. All patients showed a high level of satisfaction with the virtual reality system. This study showed that virtual reality added to conventional therapy produces similar results in upper limb function compared to only conventional therapy. Moreover, the gaming aspects incorporated in conventional rehabilitation appear to produce high motivation during execution of the assigned tasks. This trial is registered with EudraCT number 2015-002157-35.

Highlights

  • The worldwide incidence of spinal cord injury (SCI) lies between 10.4 and 83 per million inhabitants per year [1]

  • This study showed that virtual reality added to conventional therapy produces similar results in upper limb function compared to only conventional therapy

  • We found that initial functional status was similar between groups, because no differences were found in any of the analyzed variables obtained in the battery of scales at the beginning of the study

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The worldwide incidence of spinal cord injury (SCI) lies between 10.4 and 83 per million inhabitants per year [1]. It has been estimated that all SCI discharges would need at least 4 hours a day of specialized care (occupational therapy, speech therapy, psychotherapy, physiotherapy, nursing, etc.), and around 84% of people with tetraplegia will need external help for performing activities of daily living (ADL) [5]. These needs are only a hint of the enormously devastating physical, social, and emotional burdens that individuals and their families face after a SCI [6]

Objectives
Methods
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call