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Effectiveness of constraint-induced movement therapy on upper-extremity function in children with cerebral palsy

CHEN YP; POPE S; TYLER D; WARREN GL
CLIN REHABIL , 2014, vol. 28, n° 10, p. 939-953
Doc n°: 170937
Localisation : Documentation IRR

D.O.I. : http://dx.doi.org/DOI:10.1177/0269215514544982
Descripteurs : AJ23 - PARALYSIE CEREBRALE, DD162 - TRAITEMENT DE REEDUCATION - MEMBRE SUPERIEUR

OBJECTIVE: To systematically examine the research literature on the effectiveness
of constraint-induced movement therapy on improving arm function in children with
cerebral palsy, and to assess the association between the study effect size and
the characteristics of the patients and intervention protocol.
DATA SOURCES: A
systematic literature search was conducted in PubMed, PsycINFO, Cochrane, CINAHL,
Web of Science, and TRIP Database up to May 2014. REVIEW METHODS: Studies
employing randomized controlled trial design, children with cerebral palsy,
comparing constraint-induced movement therapy with another intervention with a
focus on arm function, and upper-extremity measures were included in this review.
Methodological quality was evaluated using the Physiotherapy Evidence-based
Database (PEDro) scale. RESULTS: The literature search resulted in 27 randomized
controlled trial studies with good methodological quality that compared
constraint-induced movement therapy with other intervention therapy. Overall,
constraint-induced movement therapy provided a medium beneficial effect (d =
0.546; p < 0.001) when compared with conventional therapy. For the subgroup
analyses, presence of a dose-equivalent comparison group, intervention location,
and time of follow-up were significant factors. Studies examining
constraint-induced movement therapy effect without a dose-equivalent comparison
group showed a large effect in children with cerebral palsy, but studies with a
dose-equivalent group only showed a small effect. Children who received
home-based constraint-induced movement therapy had a better improvement in arm
function than those who received constraint-induced movement therapy elsewhere.
CONCLUSION: The research literature supports constraint-induced movement therapy
as an effective intervention to improve arm function in children with cerebral palsy.
CI - (c) The Author(s) 2014.

Langue : ANGLAIS

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