The Translation of Mobile-Exoneuromusculoskeleton-Assisted Wrist–Hand Poststroke Telerehabilitation from Laboratory to Clinical Service

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Abstract

Rehabilitation robots are helpful in poststroke telerehabilitation; however, their feasibility and rehabilitation effectiveness in clinical settings have not been sufficiently investigated. A non-randomized controlled trial was conducted to investigate the feasibility of translating a telerehabilitation program assisted by a mobile wrist/hand exoneuromusculoskeleton (WH-ENMS) into routine clinical services and to compare the rehabilitative effects achieved in the hospital-service-based group (n = 12, clinic group) with the laboratory-research-based group (n = 12, lab group). Both groups showed significant improvements (p ≤ 0.05) in clinical assessments of behavioral motor functions and in muscular coordination and kinematic evaluations after the training and at the 3-month follow-up, with the lab group demonstrating better motor gains than the clinic group (p ≤ 0.05). The results indicated that the WH-ENMS-assisted tele-program was feasible and effective for upper limb rehabilitation when integrated into routine practice, and the quality of patient–operator interactions physically and remotely affected the rehabilitative outcomes.

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Qing, W., Nam, C. Y., Shum, H. M. H., Chan, M. K. L., Yu, K. P., Ng, S. S. W., … Hu, X. (2023). The Translation of Mobile-Exoneuromusculoskeleton-Assisted Wrist–Hand Poststroke Telerehabilitation from Laboratory to Clinical Service. Bioengineering, 10(8). https://doi.org/10.3390/bioengineering10080976

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