Improvement of quality of life after 2-month exoskeleton training in patients with chronic spinal cord injury
To examine changes in quality of life (QoL) after an eight-week period of robotic exoskeleton training in a homogeneous group of patients with chronic complete spinal cord injury (SCI). Prospective single-group pre-post study. Rehabilitation center. Patients with a chronic (>6 months) motor compl...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The journal of spinal cord medicine 2024-05, Vol.ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print), p.1-7 |
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Zusammenfassung: | To examine changes in quality of life (QoL) after an eight-week period of robotic exoskeleton training in a homogeneous group of patients with chronic complete spinal cord injury (SCI).
Prospective single-group pre-post study.
Rehabilitation center.
Patients with a chronic (>6 months) motor complete SCI (T1-L1).
Twenty-four training sessions with the ReWalk exoskeleton over an eight-week period.
QoL, assessed with the sum score of the Short Form-36 with Walk Wheel modification (SF-36ww). Secondary outcome measures were the eight SF-36ww subdomains, satisfaction with bladder and bowel management, lower extremity joint passive range of motion (pROM), and lower extremity spasticity.
Twenty-one participants completed the training. QoL significantly improved after the training period (average SF-36 sum score 621 ± 90) compared to baseline (571 ± 133) (t(20)=-2.5, P=.02). Improvements were seen on the SF-36ww subdomains for pain (P=.003), social functioning (P=.03), mental health (P=.02), and general health perception (P=.01). Satisfaction with bladder management (range 1-5) improved from median 3 at baseline to 4 after exoskeleton training (P=0.01). No changes in satisfaction with bowel management (P=.11), pROM (hip-extension (P=.49), knee-extension (P=.36), ankle dorsiflexion (P=.69)), or spasticity (P=.94) were found.
Even in patients with chronic motor complete SCI and a relatively high level of QoL at baseline, a short-term exoskeleton training improved their QoL, pain and satisfaction with bladder management; findings that warrant further controlled studies in this specific SCI population. |
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ISSN: | 1079-0268 2045-7723 |
DOI: | 10.1080/10790268.2022.2052502 |