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Effect of body weight support training on lower extremity motor function in patients with spinal cord injury: a systematic review and meta-analysis [with consumer summary] |
Huang L, Huang HL, Dang XW, Wang YJ |
American Journal of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation 2024 Feb;103(2):149-157 |
systematic review |
OBJECTIVES: The aims of the study are to systematically evaluate the effect of body weight support training on lower extremity motor function(s) in patients with spinal cord injury and to compare the effect differences among three body weight support training methods. DESIGN: PubMed, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, Embase, CNKI, CBM, China Scientific Journal, and Wan Fang databases were searched until December 31, 2022. Meta-analysis and network meta-analysis were conducted using RevMan 5.4 and ADDIS 1.16.8. RESULTS: Nineteen randomized controlled trials involving 864 patients were included. The meta-analysis showed that body weight support training could improve lower extremity motor scores according to the International Standards for Neurological Classification of Spinal Cord Injury standard (mean difference 6.38, 95% confidence interval 3.96 to 8.80, p < 0.05), walking speed (standard mean difference 0.77, 95% confidence interval 0.52 to 1.02, p < 0.05), and modified Barthel Index scores (mean difference 9.85, 95% confidence interval 8.39 to 11.30, p < 0.05). The network meta-analysis showed no significant difference among the three body weight support training methods for improving lower extremity motor scores in patients with spinal cord injury. The best probability ranking of the body weight support training methods for improving lower extremity motor scores in patients with spinal cord injury was robot-assisted gait training (p = 0.60), followed by aquatic exercise (p = 0.21) and body weight support training (p = 0.19). CONCLUSIONS: Body weight support training can improve lower extremity motor score in patients with spinal cord injury. No significant difference was observed among the three body weight support training methods, but robot-assisted gait training may produce the best effect.
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