AI Article Synopsis

  • Self-reported outcomes help understand an individual's perceived manual ability after a stroke and were studied in relation to objective kinematic variables during the first year post-stroke.
  • The research involved 66 participants from the SALGOT study, who were evaluated at multiple timepoints using the ABILHAND questionnaire and a virtual target-to-target pointing task.
  • Results showed that correlations between self-reported manual ability and objective movement assessments were low initially but improved over time, suggesting that both self-reported and objective measures are crucial for evaluating recovery in the early stages after a stroke.*

Article Abstract

Self-reported outcomes provide unique insights about an individual's perceived manual ability after stroke. This study aimed at determining how the relationship between objective kinematic variables obtained from the target-to-target pointing task and self-reported manual ability varies during the first year in individuals after stroke. Sixty-six individuals from the Stroke Arm Longitudinal study at the University of Gothenburg (SALGOT) cohort were assessed using ABILHAND questionnaire and kinematic analysis at five timepoints between the 10 day and 12 month after stroke. Kinematic analysis was performed using a target-to-target pointing task in a virtual environment. Spearman's correlation was used to determine the extent of correlation between ABILHAND logits and kinematic variables. The correlations varied with time within the first year after stroke. The correlations were low or very low early after stroke and became moderate to high after 6 months for objective measures of movement time and smoothness, but remained low to moderate for mean velocity and low for peak velocity. Due to this discrepancy between self-perceived and objective assessments of arm function, a combination of self-reported and objective assessments of upper limb should be used as outcome measures, especially in the acute and subacute stages after stroke.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7083900PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-61834-1DOI Listing

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