Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2695209 Journal of Hand Therapy 2009 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

Study DesignThis was a pre post test design.IntroductionRetraining the brain is one approach to remediate movement dysfunction resulting from task specific focal hand dystonia (FHDTSP).PurposeDocument change in task specific performance (TSP) for patients with FHDTSP after 8 weeks of comprehensive home training (fitness activities, task practice, learning based memory and sensorimotor training).MethodsThirteen subjects were admitted and evaluated at baseline, immediately and 6 months post treatment for task specific performance, functional independence, sensory discrimination, fine motor speed and strength. In Phase I, 10 subjects were randomly assigned to home training alone or supervised practice prior to initiating the home training. In phase II, 2 subjects crossed over and 3 new subjects were added (18 hands). The intent to treat model was followed. Outcomes were summarized by median, effect size, and proportion improving with nonparametric analysis for significance.ResultsImmediately post-intervention, TSP, sensory discrimination, and fine motor speed improved 60-80% (p<0.00l respectively). Functional independence and strength improved by 50%. Eleven subjects (16 hands) were re-evaluated at 6 months; all but one subject reported a return to work. Task-specific performance was scored 84-90%. Supervised practice was associated with greater compliance and greater gains in performance.ConclusionsProgressive task practice plus learning based memory and sensorimotor training can improve TSP in patients with FHDTSP. Compliance with home training is enhanced when initiated with supervised practice.Level of Evidence4.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Orthopedics, Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation
Authors
, , ,