Abstract
Background of the study: The main cause of disability globally is stroke, with upper extremity motor impairment mostly involved. Virtual reality is an emerging technology that has been widely used in stroke rehabilitation with physical therapy for upper extremity functional restoration. The present systematic review is aimed at providing an evidence-based quality assessment of virtual reality based rehabilitation for upper extremity motor recovery in patients with cerebrovascular accident. Methodology: A comprehensive search was conducted in major electronic databases including Medline (PubMed), Pedro, Embase, and CINAHL published articles between 2018 to 2023 whose full text was available. This review comprised 9 studies. With the use of the Cochrane risk of bias tool, the caliber of the included studies was evaluated. Results: The current evidence suggests that VR-based interventions can significantly improve upper limb motor function. The systematic review featured few RCTs and fewer subjects, making generalization difficult, especially as most studies incorporated virtual reality with traditional therapy, and those focusing purely on virtual reality were similarly tiny. The review is the independent creation of authors. Conclusion: VR-based therapies have the potential to be an efficient and secure method for stroke patients to regain upper extremity motor function. To provide standardized procedures and result metrics, as well as to solve the practical difficulties related to implementing VR in stroke therapy, further research is required.
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