A four-week, task-specific neuroprosthesis program for a person with no active wrist or finger movement because of chronic stroke

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Abstract

Background and Purpose: This case report describes a task-specific training protocol incorporating functional electrical stimulation for a person who had chronic stroke and who initially exhibited no active wrist or finger movement. Case Description: A 63-year-old man with hemiparesis caused by an ischemic stroke 7 years before the intervention described here received task-specific training incorporating an electrical stimulation neuroprosthesis 3 hours per day, 5 days per week, for 4 weeks. Testing was conducted before and after the intervention and again 6 weeks later with stroke-specific outcome measures. Outcomes: Increases in function and quality of life were observed after the intervention. Discussion: An intervention incorporating task-specific training with functional electrical stimulation appears to have increased function and quality of life in a person with chronic stroke. This type of intervention might provide a pathway by which people with similar impairments would become eligible for more advanced treatment regimens, such as modified constraint-induced therapy. © 2008 American Physical Therapy Association.

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Dunning, K., Berberich, A., Albers, B., Mortellite, K., Levine, P. G., Hill Hermann, V. A., & Page, S. J. (2008). A four-week, task-specific neuroprosthesis program for a person with no active wrist or finger movement because of chronic stroke. Physical Therapy, 88(3), 397–405. https://doi.org/10.2522/ptj.20070087

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