From 1452 titles initially selected, eleven studies were finally selected (
n = 95
participants), all focusing on post-stroke hemiparesis. Nine were
self-controlled case-series and two were single-case reports. Six
studies described functional electrical stimulation devices, three
described use of exoskeletons and two passive devices. Command of the
nine active devices included
electromyography,
kinematic data, push-button, inertial unit measurement and force
sensors. Quality assessment using JBI Scale found low quality evidence
of all studies with heterogeneity of outcomes. One of the two studies
describing passive assistive devices demonstrated significant
improvement in the size of block lifted during the box and block test
(BBT). Only one of the three studies using exoskeleton found significant
improvement in the BBT and various functional tasks. Four of the six
neuroprosthetics studies found moderate to significant improvement
across outcomes.
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