About this item:

1,169 Views | 0 Downloads

Author Notes:

Send reprints requests to Steven L. Wolf, PhD, PT, FAPTA, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Emory University School of Medicine, 1441 Clifton Road NE, Atlanta, GA 30322. swolf@emory.edu

Subject:

Research Funding:

This work is supported in part by National Institutes of Health grant HD 37606.

Keywords:

  • stroke
  • rehabilitation
  • upper extremity
  • forced use
  • constraint-induced movement therapy
  • transcranial magnetic stimulation
  • neuroimaging

Repetitive Task Practice: A Critical Review of Constraint-Induced Movement Therapy in Stroke

Tools:

Journal Title:

Neurologist

Volume:

Volume 8, Number 6

Publisher:

, Pages 325-338

Type of Work:

Article | Post-print: After Peer Review

Abstract:

BACKGROUND Constraint-induced (CI) movement therapy (also called forced use by some investigators and clinicians) has gained increasing popularity as a treatment mode for restoring function in the upper extremities of patients with stroke. The purpose of this article is to review the concept of constraint-induced movement therapy and provide a critical analysis of the existing data. REVIEW SUMMARY The evidence to date offers encouragement for the application of this procedure for patients who have some movement recovery out of synergy. Success may be contingent on patient cooperation and intense repetitive use with applications of retraining through practice and shaping. The extent to which each of the latter elements influences the magnitude of recovery is still unclear. However, task novelty and challenge seem important to recovery of function. There are several methods used to map cortical changes after stroke. At this time, transcranial magnetic stimulation is the primary vehicle used to assess motor cortical reorganization after CI therapy in humans. CONCLUSIONS Accumulating data indicate that the size of a cortical area representative of a muscle does expand and its center of gravity does change with CI therapy.

Copyright information:

© Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.

Export to EndNote