5. Innovations in motor rehabilitation Flashcards

1
Q

What is proprioception?

A

Awareness of the position/movements of you own body.

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2
Q

Which 2 acquisition phenomena are there?

A
  1. Sequence learning = the acquisition of new movement patterns through long-term practice
  2. (Sensori)motor adaptation = the ability to adjust our movements to changing internal or environmental demands
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3
Q

Sequence learning has 3 stages, which?

A
  1. Early/cognitive phase (acquisition): involves declarative learning –> people often engage in self-talk to remind themselves of what they have to do.
  2. Associative phase (consolidation): detect and eliminate errors, starting to link individual components of movements together (smoothness).
  3. Autonomous phase (retention): performance becomes automatic, skill has developed –> working memory can be used for other purposes.
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4
Q

What are 3 examples of (sensori)motor adaptation?

A
  1. Visual displacement: shifting the visual field with goggles.
  2. External forces: when you push right, but it goes left –> adaptation.
  3. Split-belt traitmail: can be used for gait rehabilitation in stroke patients –> when someone adapts, that’s a good indication that rehabilitation may help.
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5
Q

What is neuroplasticity neutrality?

A

The fact that the brain is capable of strenghtenen, weakenen, and forming neural connection, but that learning of the wrong thing also can lead to more of the wrong thing.

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6
Q

An effective innovative intervention that allows for motor skill acquisition through neuroplasticity needs to include… (5x)

A
  1. Practice: repetitive and varied practice of meaningful tasks
  2. Level of difficulty: adjusting to the patients skill level (staircase procedure)
  3. Problem solving/error-correction: cognitive and executive mechanisms should be engaged by the task
  4. Motivation: gamified and VR approached are more fun (this affects motivation)
  5. Feedback quality/frequency: feedback should be used to stimulate wanted, and discourage unwanted movement, matching the relevant sensory modality of the task
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7
Q

Individual differences in what domains can be used as predictors of adaptability of motor memory? (4x)

A
  1. Visual field dependence: people who learn faster usually rely less on visual information, so this tells us that visual reliance may predict how someone will adapt.
  2. Visuospatial working memory: better vWM performance is associated with faster manual adaptation training, so WM might be another predictor.
  3. Structural brain changes: patients with greater grey matter increases in the PMC after initial training also show a faster rate of adaptation on that same task.
  4. Functional brain changes: some areas are associated with faster adaptation, others with better memory of adaptation strategies when tested in a follow-up trial.
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8
Q

Innovative alternatives for the assessment of motor issues for the following domains:

  1. Tremor/fine motor skills
  2. Reaction time and medication
  3. Freezing of gait
  4. Remote assessment
A
  1. Tremor/fine motor skills: with the Archimedes spiral drawing test –> when done on a tablet, this allows for much broader investigation and quantification of performance (time, speed, length of spiral, deviation from template, etc.).
  2. Reaction time and medication: often assessed with key press tasks, however, mouse movements may better distinguish between planning (= better of meds) and actual execution (= better on meds) –> since initiation is more cognitive and execution is more motor.
  3. Freezing of gait: hard to assess, because it doesn’t always happen during a clinician visit, but Interactive WalkWay can project stepping stones and stop bars on the floor –> this doesn’t evoke freezing of gait, but the outcomes can differentiate freezers from non-freezers.
  4. Remote assessment: online assessments of motor symptoms can be done with a smartphone video, whenever symptoms are experienced. The interpretation is objective (done by algorithm) and there is a strong correlation between this tool and clinical evaluations (strong convergent validity).
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9
Q

Name some assistive technology for movement for the following domains:

  1. Walking
  2. Eating
  3. Writing
A
  1. Walking: external cues can be very helpful
    - Laser shoes
    - Vibrating socks
    - Holocue (MR goggles)
  2. Eating: Liftware spoon –> counter vibrations to stabilize the hand
  3. Writing: ARC pen –> has a high-frequency vibration to help patients increasing their size of writing (micrographia)
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