Evidence of end-effector based gait machines in gait rehabilitation after CNS lesion.

Authors
Category Systematic review
JournalNeuroRehabilitation
Year 2013
BACKGROUND: A task-specific repetitive approach in gait rehabilitation after CNS lesion is well accepted nowadays. To ease the therapists’ and patients’ physical effort, the past two decades have seen the introduction of gait machines to intensify the amount of gait practice. Two principles have emerged, an exoskeleton- and an end-effector-based approach. Both systems share the harness and the body weight support. With the end-effector-based devices, the patients’ feet are positioned on two foot plates, whose movements simulate stance and swing phase. OBJECTIVE: This article provides an overview on the end-effector based machine’s effectiveness regarding the restoration of gait. METHODS: For the electromechanical gait trainer GT I, a meta analysis identified nine controlled trials (RCT) in stroke subjects (n = 568) and were analyzed to detect differences between end-effector-based locomotion + physiotherapy and physiotherapy alone. RESULTS: Patients practising with the machine effected in a superior gait ability (210 out of 319 patients, 65.8% vs. 96 out of 249 patients, 38.6%, respectively, Z = 2.29, p = 0.020), due to a larger training intensity. Only single RCTs have been reported for other devices and etiologies. CONCLUSIONS: The introduction of end-effector based gait machines has opened a new succesful chapter in gait rehabilitation after CNS lesion. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved)
Epistemonikos ID: 506f3fe93d3d55d400433137f5f0d872ecc9c754
First added on: Oct 28, 2013