Abstract

BackgroundStudies using clinical measures have suggested that proprioceptive dysfunction is related to motor impairment of the upper extremity following adult stroke. We used robotic technology and clinical measures to assess the relationship between position sense and reaching with the hemiparetic upper limb in children with perinatal stroke.MethodsProspective term-born children with magnetic resonance imaging-confirmed perinatal ischemic stroke and upper extremity deficits were recruited from a population-based cohort. Neurotypical controls were recruited from the community. Participants completed two tasks in the Kinarm robot: arm position-matching (three parameters: variability [Varxy], contraction/expansion [Areaxy], systematic spatial shift [Shiftxy]) and visually guided reaching (five parameters: posture speed [PS], reaction time [RT], initial direction error [IDE], speed maxima count [SMC], movement time [MT]). Additional clinical assessments of sensory (thumb localization test) and motor impairment (Assisting Hand Assessment, Chedoke-McMaster Stroke Assessment) were completed and compared to robotic measures.ResultsForty-eight children with stroke (26 arterial, 22 venous, mean age: 12.0 ± 4.0 years) and 145 controls (mean age: 12.8 ± 3.9 years) completed both tasks. Position-matching performance in children with stroke did not correlate with performance on the visually guided reaching task. Robotic sensory and motor measures correlated with only some clinical tests. For example, AHA scores correlated with reaction time (R = − 0.61, p < 0.001), initial direction error (R = − 0.64, p < 0.001), and movement time (R = − 0.62, p < 0.001).ConclusionsRobotic technology can quantify complex, discrete aspects of upper limb sensory and motor function in hemiparetic children. Robot-measured deficits in position sense and reaching with the contralesional limb appear to be relatively independent of each other and correlations for both with clinical measures are modest. Knowledge of the relationship between sensory and motor impairment may inform future rehabilitation strategies and improve outcomes for children with hemiparetic cerebral palsy.

Highlights

  • Studies using clinical measures have suggested that proprioceptive dysfunction is related to motor impairment of the upper extremity following adult stroke

  • Full list of author information is available at the end of the article

  • We aimed to evaluate the relationship between robot-quantified position sense and visually guided reaching behavior of the contralesional, strokeaffected limb in children with hemiparetic cerebral palsy (HCP)

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Summary

Introduction

Studies using clinical measures have suggested that proprioceptive dysfunction is related to motor impairment of the upper extremity following adult stroke. We used robotic technology and clinical measures to assess the relationship between position sense and reaching with the hemiparetic upper limb in children with perinatal stroke. More than 80% of children with HCP experience decreased motor control and coordination, weakness, spasticity, and impaired reaching and grasping with their contralesional, strokeaffected arm [14,15,16,17]. These deficits in sensory and motor function in the affected upper limb, and impairments in sensorimotor integration impact interactions with the environment and a child’s ability to complete activities of daily living. About the relationship between proprioception and motor control and how this may be altered following perinatal stroke

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