More than a black box of rehabilitation: Characterizing therapy programmes following botulinum toxin injections for spasticity in adults with stroke.
Abstract
[OBJECTIVES] To describe ambulatory rehabilitation programmes (physical and occupational therapy activities and interventions) following botulinum toxin injections for post-stroke spasticity using a stroke rehabilitation taxonomy. To explore the relationship between therapy provided and injected limb/s and treatment goals.
[DESIGN] Prospective, observational cohort study.
[PARTICIPANTS] Stroke survivors (n = 47) participating in ambulatory rehabilitation programmes following botulinum toxin injections for upper limb, lower limb or upper and lower limb spasticity.
[METHODS] Standardized therapy documentation forms were completed prospectively for each occupational and physical therapy session. Main outcomes were the proportion of total therapy time spent in various therapeutic activities; total sessions during which each intervention was used to facilitate the activities most time was spent in; and goals related to each activity category. Sub-analysis was carried out for participants, based on limb/s injected.
[RESULTS] Most time was spent in "upper extremity control" activities as the upper limb was more often injected. A large proportion of therapy time was spent in activities remediating "performance skills or body structure and function impairments". In the upper and lower limb, and upper limb groups 38.7% and 46.2% of goals, respectively, related to this activity category, but less than 10% in the lower limb group. Little time was spent in community participation and leisure activities, whilst over one-third of lower limb group goals related to this category.
[CONCLUSION] Ambulatory rehabilitation programmes following botulinum toxin injections for post-stroke spasticity varied depending on limb/s injected and reflected treatment goals to some extent.
[DESIGN] Prospective, observational cohort study.
[PARTICIPANTS] Stroke survivors (n = 47) participating in ambulatory rehabilitation programmes following botulinum toxin injections for upper limb, lower limb or upper and lower limb spasticity.
[METHODS] Standardized therapy documentation forms were completed prospectively for each occupational and physical therapy session. Main outcomes were the proportion of total therapy time spent in various therapeutic activities; total sessions during which each intervention was used to facilitate the activities most time was spent in; and goals related to each activity category. Sub-analysis was carried out for participants, based on limb/s injected.
[RESULTS] Most time was spent in "upper extremity control" activities as the upper limb was more often injected. A large proportion of therapy time was spent in activities remediating "performance skills or body structure and function impairments". In the upper and lower limb, and upper limb groups 38.7% and 46.2% of goals, respectively, related to this activity category, but less than 10% in the lower limb group. Little time was spent in community participation and leisure activities, whilst over one-third of lower limb group goals related to this category.
[CONCLUSION] Ambulatory rehabilitation programmes following botulinum toxin injections for post-stroke spasticity varied depending on limb/s injected and reflected treatment goals to some extent.
추출된 의학 개체 (NER)
| 유형 | 영어 표현 | 한국어 / 풀이 | UMLS CUI | 출처 | 등장 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 시술 | botulinum toxin
|
보툴리눔독소 주사 | dict | 4 |
MeSH Terms
Activities of Daily Living; Adult; Botulinum Toxins, Type A; Combined Modality Therapy; Female; Humans; Injections; Lower Extremity; Male; Middle Aged; Muscle Spasticity; Neuromuscular Agents; Occupational Therapy; Patient Care Team; Physical Therapy Modalities; Prospective Studies; Stroke; Stroke Rehabilitation; Upper Extremity
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