Title of article
Do Robotics and Virtual Reality Add Real Progress to Mirror Therapy Rehabilitation? A Scoping Review
Author/Authors
Pinsault, Nicolas Critical Thinking Research Federation FED - University Grenoble-Alpes - Grenoble, France , Darbois , Nelly Critical Thinking Research Federation FED - University Grenoble-Alpes - Grenoble, France , Guillaud, Albin Critical Thinking Research Federation FED - University Grenoble-Alpes - Grenoble, France
Pages
16
From page
1
To page
16
Abstract
Mirror therapy has been used in rehabilitation for multiple indications since the 1990s. Current evidence supports some
of these indications, particularly for cerebrovascular accidents in adults and cerebral palsy in children. Since 2000s, computerized or
robotic mirror therapy has been developed and marketed. Objectives. To map the extent, nature, and rationale of research activity
in robotic or computerized mirror therapy and the type of evidence available for any indication. To investigate the relevance of
conducting a systematic review and meta-analysis on these therapies. Method. Systematic scoping review. Searches were conducted
(up to May 2018) in the Cochrane Library, Google Scholar, IEEE Xplore, Medline, Physiotherapy Evidence Database, and PsycINFO
databases. References from identified studies were examined. Results. In sum, 75 articles met the inclusion criteria. Most studies
were publicly funded (57% of studies; n = 43), without disclosure of conflict of interest (59% of studies; n = 44). The main
outcomes assessed were pain, satisfaction on the device, and body function and activity, mainly for stroke and amputees patients
and healthy participants. Most design studies were case reports (67% of studies; n = 50), with only 12 randomized controlled
trials with 5 comparing standard mirror therapy versus virtual mirror therapy, 5 comparing second-generation mirror therapy
versus conventional rehabilitation, and 2 comparing other interventions. Conclusion. Much of the research on second-generation
mirror therapy is of very low quality. Evidence-based rationale to conduct such studies is missing. It is not relevant to recommend
investment by rehabilitation professionals and institutions in such devices.
Keywords
Robotics , Virtual Reality , Real Progress , Mirror Therapy Rehabilitation , A Scoping Review
Journal title
Rehabilitation Research and Practice
Serial Year
2018
Full Text URL
Record number
2615263
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