Arm hand skilled performance in persons with a cervical spinal cord injury-long-term follow-up

A. C. Franke*, G. J. Snoek, S. de Groot, A. V. Nene, A. I. F. Spooren, M. W. M. Post

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Retrospective cohort study.To assess development of arm hand skilled performance (AHSP) during and after in-patient rehabilitation in persons with cervical spinal cord injury (CSCI) and to determine factors that influence the outcome.Eight rehabilitation centres in the Netherlands with specialised spinal cord injury departments.AHSP was assessed using the Van Lieshout test (VLT) in persons admitted with recent CSCI. Assessment was carried out at the beginning (t1), after 3 months (t2), at the end (t3) of in-patient rehabilitation, and 1 and 5 years thereafter (t4, t5). Multilevel regression analysis was performed to determine development of AHSP and associations between AHSP and age, gender, motor completeness, lesion level (high or low CSCI), motor scores of upper extremity (MSUE), and pain in the tested arm.Fifty-five participants were included with mean age 38 years (range 18?64). There were 73% male, 80% had high CSCI (C3?C6) and 69% had motor complete lesion. Scores of VLT improved significantly during in-patient rehabilitation (mean: t1=25; t3=33) (P=0.005), scores remained unchanged at 1 year (t4=32) and 5 years (t5=32) (P=0.903) after in-patient rehabilitation. Motor completeness, MSUE and pain were significantly related to the VLT score (P
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)161-164
JournalSpinal Cord
Volume51
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb 2013

Keywords

  • arm hand skilled performance
  • Van Lieshout test
  • cervical spinal cord injury
  • long-term outcome

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