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Kinematic analysis of head, trunk, and pelvis movement when people early after stroke reach sideways

Kinematic analysis of head, trunk, and pelvis movement when people early after stroke reach sideways
Kinematic analysis of head, trunk, and pelvis movement when people early after stroke reach sideways
Background. Sideways reaching with the unaffected arm while seated is a component of everyday activities and can be a challenging task early after stroke. Kinematic analysis of a lateral reach task may provide potential rehabilitation strategies.

Objective. The authors examined the difference between people with stroke and healthy controls in the movement sequence of head, trunk, and pelvis, as well as the difference in angle at maximum reach and peak velocity for each body segment during reach and return.

Methods. Twenty-four people within 12 weeks of a stroke and 20 healthy subjects performed a standardized lateral reach. Using CODAmotion, movement sequence was determined and angles and peak velocities were calculated.

Results. When reaching, people with stroke moved their pelvis first, followed by the trunk and head, whereas healthy controls started with their head and then moved their trunk and pelvis. Patients achieved significantly smaller angles at maximum reach compared with healthy subjects for all body segments and lower peak velocities during the reach (for head, trunk, and pelvis) and the return (for head and trunk).

Conclusions. Lateral reaching to the unaffected side early after stroke revealed a different pattern than normal and patients reached less far and moved at a slower speed. Specific training strategies to improve reaching are needed.

1545-9683
656-663
Verheyden, Geert
aabb1bd5-f394-4c82-ba97-7926a4255282
Van Duijnhoven, Hanneke J.R.
9cc2b99b-e8f3-4760-baa3-f140c187c05f
Burnett, Malcolm
2c3baa00-d368-4ce7-8a8b-822ea7ebe475
Littlewood, Janet
0af467cf-d482-4f74-8e2a-ec5108447289
Kunkel, Dorit
6b6c65d5-1d03-4a13-9db8-1342cd43f352
Ashburn, Ann
818b9ce8-f025-429e-9532-43ee4fd5f991
Verheyden, Geert
aabb1bd5-f394-4c82-ba97-7926a4255282
Van Duijnhoven, Hanneke J.R.
9cc2b99b-e8f3-4760-baa3-f140c187c05f
Burnett, Malcolm
2c3baa00-d368-4ce7-8a8b-822ea7ebe475
Littlewood, Janet
0af467cf-d482-4f74-8e2a-ec5108447289
Kunkel, Dorit
6b6c65d5-1d03-4a13-9db8-1342cd43f352
Ashburn, Ann
818b9ce8-f025-429e-9532-43ee4fd5f991

Verheyden, Geert, Van Duijnhoven, Hanneke J.R., Burnett, Malcolm, Littlewood, Janet, Kunkel, Dorit and Ashburn, Ann (2011) Kinematic analysis of head, trunk, and pelvis movement when people early after stroke reach sideways. Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair, 25 (7), 656-663. (doi:10.1177/1545968311401628). (PMID:21451115)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background. Sideways reaching with the unaffected arm while seated is a component of everyday activities and can be a challenging task early after stroke. Kinematic analysis of a lateral reach task may provide potential rehabilitation strategies.

Objective. The authors examined the difference between people with stroke and healthy controls in the movement sequence of head, trunk, and pelvis, as well as the difference in angle at maximum reach and peak velocity for each body segment during reach and return.

Methods. Twenty-four people within 12 weeks of a stroke and 20 healthy subjects performed a standardized lateral reach. Using CODAmotion, movement sequence was determined and angles and peak velocities were calculated.

Results. When reaching, people with stroke moved their pelvis first, followed by the trunk and head, whereas healthy controls started with their head and then moved their trunk and pelvis. Patients achieved significantly smaller angles at maximum reach compared with healthy subjects for all body segments and lower peak velocities during the reach (for head, trunk, and pelvis) and the return (for head and trunk).

Conclusions. Lateral reaching to the unaffected side early after stroke revealed a different pattern than normal and patients reached less far and moved at a slower speed. Specific training strategies to improve reaching are needed.

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Published date: 30 March 2011
Organisations: Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 187263
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/187263
ISSN: 1545-9683
PURE UUID: 67ecaba2-f80a-469c-bb50-40a000eba2c1
ORCID for Malcolm Burnett: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5481-4398
ORCID for Dorit Kunkel: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4449-1414

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Date deposited: 16 May 2011 14:39
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:15

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Contributors

Author: Geert Verheyden
Author: Hanneke J.R. Van Duijnhoven
Author: Malcolm Burnett ORCID iD
Author: Janet Littlewood
Author: Dorit Kunkel ORCID iD
Author: Ann Ashburn

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