4.0 Article

Robotic-assisted rehabilitation of proximal humerus fractures in virtual environments A pilot study

Journal

ZEITSCHRIFT FUR GERONTOLOGIE UND GERIATRIE
Volume 44, Issue 6, Pages 387-392

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00391-011-0258-2

Keywords

Rehabilitation; Virtual systems; Humeral fractures; Feasibility studies; Geriatrics

Funding

  1. Robert Bosch Stiftung (Kompetenzzentrum Geriatrie), Stuttgart, Germany
  2. Verein Freunde und Forderer des Robert-Bosch-Krankenhauses e.V.
  3. Hocoma GmbH

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With the growing incidence of upper arm fractures among older people, innovative treatment strategies will be needed in geriatric rehabilitation. A pilot study was designed to test the feasibility of robotic-assisted rehabilitation after proximal humeral fractures. Within a sample of 8 older patients (79.5 +/- 6.12 years), functional ability, quality and range of movement, self-rated impairment, quality of life, and user satisfaction were measured in an observational pre-/postdesign. During rehabilitation robotic-assisted training was applied. Training motivation and acceptance were high in this sample, showing improvements in functional ability (p = 0.03), quality of movement (p = 0.02), range of motion, self-evaluation (p = 0.01), and quality of life. This pilot study highlights the possible implementation of robotic-assisted rehabilitation after proximal humeral fractures in geriatric rehabilitation. The measurement and training protocol was suitable to document progress in rehabilitation.

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