FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 15, 2009
Contact: Christine Guilfoy
Office: (301) 634-7253
cguilfoy@the-aps.org
Research Shows How A Stroke
Affects Hand Function; Provides Roadmap For Rehabilitation
BETHESDA,
Md. (June 15, 2009) A person whose hand function has been affected by a
stroke can release an object more quickly when the affected arm is supported
on a platform, but the support does not make it easier to grip the object,
according to a new study. The study also found that active muscle-stretching
exercises improved how quickly the stroke survivor could grip an object, but
made release of the object more difficult. These findings show how a stroke
affects hand function, and provide a roadmap for rehabilitation.
Stroke is a leading cause of long-term disability among
American adults. People who have suffered strokes often experience hand
impairment, including significant delays in how long it takes to grip and
release objects. This study included 10 people who had hand impairments from
a severe stroke that had injured one hemisphere of the brain but not the
other.
The study, “Delays in grip initiation and termination
in persons with stroke: Effects of arm support and active muscle stretch
exercise” appears in the online edition of the Journal of Neurophysiology.
The authors are Na Jin Seo, William Z. Rymer and Derek G. Kamper, of the
Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago. Dr. Rymer is also affiliated with
Northwestern University, and Dr. Kamper with the Illinois Institute of
Chicago.
In this study, the authors wanted to quantify the time
needed to:
-
grip an object with the hand directly affected by the
stroke (the paretic hand) and the non-paretic hand (the unaffected hand
controlled by the uninjured hemisphere)
-
release an object with both the paretic and non-paretic
hands
They also wanted to determine the effect that:
Experimental design
The study included 10 people with severe hand
impairment because of a stroke. The study also included five healthy people
as controls.
The study participants sat in front of a cylinder that
they gripped as quickly and as strongly as they could when they heard an
auditory signal. The researchers instructed them to release the cylinder as
quickly as they could when the signal stopped. The researchers recorded grip
initiation and release by using an electromyogram, which detects muscle
activity.
The study found that the speed of grip and release was
impaired in both hands for those who suffered a stroke, even though only one
hemisphere of the brain had been injured. They found that:
-
Stroke survivors could grip the cylinder much more quickly
than they could release it. The paretic hand took 1.9 seconds to grip
the cylinder but required 5 seconds to release it. In comparison, the
healthy controls took 0.2 seconds to grip and 0.4 seconds to release.
-
The study also found that the non-paretic hands of the
stroke survivors had been affected, although not nearly as much as the
paretic hand. The non-paretic hand took 0.5 seconds to grip and 1.6
seconds to release.
The researchers also looked at grip initiation and grip
termination when the stroke survivors used a device that supported the arm
on a platform, leaving the hand free. (See
http://www.ric.org/research/centers/mars2/Projects/development/d3.aspx
for a description of the device.) They found that the device helped stroke
survivors release the cylinder more quickly. With the device, they were able
to reduce the delay in grip termination by 37%. The device made no
significant difference in the time needed to initiate the grip.
The assistive device compensates for gravitational
forces, thereby supporting the weight of the arm and permitting relaxation
of the muscles of the arm and shoulder. This allows the stroke survivor to
more easily control the muscles of the fingers, wrist and hand, Dr. Seo
said. She also noted that a special device may not be necessary. Supporting
the paretic arm with the non-paretic arm, or using a table to support the
arm, may do just as well.
The researchers also tested grip and release following
30 minutes of hand, wrist and finger muscle stretching exercises. They found
the muscle stretch exercises helped stroke survivors grip the cylinder more
quickly, but it further delayed time to release. The stretches reduced delay
in grip initiation by the paretic hand by 32% but increased delay in grip
termination by 24%.
The researchers hypothesize that the exercises activate
muscles, making it easier to grip but more difficult to relax the muscles,
which makes it harder to release. The stroke survivors performed the
grip-and-release trials shortly after the muscle-stretching exercises. It is
possible that the negative effect on release could be reduced if there was a
greater time interval between the stretching and the grip and release task,
Dr. Seo said. She recommends further research on this question.
In addition, according to Dr. Seo, these therapies may
help improve hand function:
-
Active-passive bilateral therapy. In the healthy
brain, the hemispheres work together to respond to stimuli and
coordinate movement. When one hemisphere of the brain suffers injury
from a stroke, it upsets the balance between the two hemispheres.
Active-passive bilateral therapy is an attempt to restore that balance,
so that the two sides can work together. The therapy involves having
stroke survivors perform a task using the non-paretic and the paretic
hand together to retrain balance between the hemispheres. When added to
the conventional therapy that forces the use of the paretic limb
repeatedly, this active-passive bilateral therapy may improve hand
function.
-
Brain stimulation. Repeated stimulation of the
neurons in the brain’s cortex via trans-cranial magnetic stimulation or
trans-cranial direct current stimulation can eventually reduce the
activities of the neurons that are overactive. Applying this stimulation
to the healthy hemisphere will reduce its ability to dominate and
inhibit the injured hemisphere, restoring some of the balance.
-
Biofeedback. Following a stroke, survivors have
impaired ability to sense motor function in the paretic limb.
Biofeedback may give them greater awareness of muscle contractions and
help them relax their hand muscles or coordinate their hand movements.
Editor’s Notes: To arrange an interview with Dr.
Seo, please contact Christine Guilfoy at
cguilfoy@the-aps.org or (301) 634-7253.
You can read the study by clicking
here or by going to:
http://jn.physiology.org/cgi/search?sortspec=relevance&author1=seo&fulltext=&pubdate_year=&volume=&firstpage=.
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