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Effect of chronic stretching interventions on the mechanical properties of muscles in patients with stroke: A systematic review - 28/05/20

Doi : 10.1016/j.rehab.2019.12.003 
Thomas Lecharte a, b, 1, Raphaël Gross b, Antoine Nordez b, c, Guillaume Le Sant a, b, , 1
a School of Physiotherapy, IFM3R, 54, rue de la Baugerie, 44230 Saint-Sébastien-Sur-Loire, France 
b Movement - Interactions - Performance, MIP, EA 4334, university of Nantes, CHU Nantes, 44000 Nantes, France 
c Health and Rehabilitation Research Institute, Faculty of Health and Environmental Sciences, Auckland University of Technology, 55, Wellesley St E, Auckland 1010, New Zealand 

Corresponding author. IFM3R, IFMK Nantes, 54, rue de la Baugerie, 44230 Saint-Sébastien-Sur-Loire, France.IFM3R, IFMK Nantes54, rue de la BaugerieSaint-Sébastien-Sur-Loire44230France

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Abstract

Background

Muscle contractures are common after stroke and their treatment usually involves stretching. However, recent meta-analyses concluded that stretching does not increase passive joint amplitudes in patients with stroke. The effectiveness of treatment is usually evaluated by measuring range of motion alone; however, assessing the effects of stretching on the structural and mechanical properties of muscle by evaluating the torque-angle relationship can help in understanding the effects of stretching. Although several studies have evaluated this, the effects remain unclear.

Objective

A systematic review of the literature on the effectiveness of stretching procedures for which the outcomes included a measurement of torque associated with range of motion or muscle structure (e.g., fascicle length) in stroke survivors.

Methods

PubMed, ScienceDirect and PEDro databases were searched by 2 independent reviewers for relevant studies on the effects of chronic stretching interventions (>4 weeks) that evaluated joint angle and passive torque or muscle structure or stiffness. The quality of the studies was assessed with the PEDro scale.

Results

Eight randomized clinical trials (total of 290 participants) met the inclusion criteria, with highly variable sample characteristics (at risk/existing contractures), program objectives (prevent/treat contractures) and duration (from 4 to 52 weeks) and volume of stretching (1 to 586 hr). All studies were classified as high quality (>6/10 PEDro score). Six studies focused on the upper limb. Many programs were less than 12 weeks (n=7 studies) and did not change mechanical/structural properties. The longest intervention (52 weeks) increased muscle fascicle length and thickness (plantar flexors).

Conclusion

Long interventions involving high stretching volumes and/or loads may have effects on muscle/joint mechanical properties, for preventing/treating contractures after stroke injury, but need to be further explored before firm conclusions are drawn.

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Keywords : Contracture, Mechanical properties, Stretching, Stroke, Torque


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Vol 63 - N° 3

P. 222-229 - mai 2020 Regresar al número
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