https://jneuroengrehab.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12984-017-0269-3
- Leigh Ann MrotekEmail authorView ORCID ID profile,
- Maria Bengtson,
- Tina Stoeckmann,
- Lior Botzer,
- Claude P. Ghez,
- John McGuire and
- Robert A. Scheidt
Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation201714:64
DOI: 10.1186/s12984-017-0269-3
© The Author(s). 2017
Received: 13 June 2016
Accepted: 5 June 2017
Published: 28 June 2017
Abstract
Background
We examined the validity and
reliability of a short robotic test of upper limb proprioception, the
Arm Movement Detection (AMD) test, which yields a ratio-scaled,
objective outcome measure to be used for evaluating the impact of
sensory deficits on impairments of motor control, motor adaptation and
functional recovery in stroke survivors.
Methods
Subjects grasped the handle of
a horizontal planar robot, with their arm and the robot hidden from
view. The robot applied graded force perturbations, which produced small
displacements of the handle. The AMD test required subjects to respond
verbally to queries regarding whether or not they detected arm motions.
Each participant completed ten, 60s trials; in five of the trials, force
perturbations were increased in small increments until the participant
detected motion while in the others, perturbations were decreased until
the participant could no longer detect motion. The mean and standard
deviation of the 10 movement detection thresholds were used to compute a
Proprioceptive Acuity Score (PAS). Based on the sensitivity and
consistency of the estimated thresholds, the PAS quantifies the
likelihood that proprioception is intact. Lower PAS scores correspond to
higher proprioceptive acuity. Thirty-nine participants completed the
AMD test, consisting of 25 neurologically intact control participants
(NIC), seven survivors of stroke with intact proprioception in the more
affected limb (HSS+P), and seven survivors of stroke with impaired or
absent proprioception in the more affected limb (HSS-P).
Results
Significant group differences
were found, with the NIC and HSS+P groups having lower (i.e., better)
PAS scores than the HSS-P group. A subset of the participants completed
the AMD test multiple times and the AMD test was found to be reliable
across repetitions.
Conclusions
The AMD test required less
than 15 min to complete and provided an objective, ratio-scaled measure
of proprioceptive acuity in the upper limb. In the future, this test
could be utilized to evaluate the contributions of sensory deficits to
motor recovery following stroke.
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