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Physiotherapy Theory and Practice
An International Journal of Physical Therapy
Volume 40, 2024 - Issue 7
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Systematic Review

The application of virtual reality to home-based rehabilitation for children and adolescents with cerebral palsy: A systematic review and meta-analysis

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Pages 1588-1608 | Received 25 Nov 2022, Accepted 20 Feb 2023, Published online: 27 Feb 2023
 

ABSTRACT

Background

Home-based rehabilitation enables children and families to participate in therapeutic activities built into their daily routines without the barriers of arrangement and transportation to facilities. Virtual reality is an emerging technology which has shown promising outcomes in rehabilitation.

Purpose

This systematic review aims to examine the feasibility and effects of virtual reality-enhanced home rehabilitation on Body functions and structures, Activity, and Participation outcomes in children and adolescents with cerebral palsy.

Methods

Interventional studies were searched across five biomedical databases on November 26, 2022. Two independent reviewers conducted study selection, data extraction, and quality assessment. The Physiotherapy Evidence Database scale and National Institutes of Health Study Quality Assessment Tools were used to evaluate the quality of included studies. Meta-analysis was performed to examine the effects of the intervention.

Results

Eighteen studies were included in this review. Home-based virtual reality rehabilitation appears feasible with effects on upper extremity and gross motor function, strength, bone density, cognition, balance, walking, daily activity performance, and participation. Meta-analyses revealed significant improvements in hand function (SMD = 0.41, p= .003), gross motor function (SMD = 0.56, p= .0002), and walking capacity (SMD = 0.44, p= .01) following home-based virtual reality intervention.

Conclusion

Home-based virtual reality may serve as an adjunct to conventional facility-based therapy to promote participation in therapeutic exercises and maximize rehabilitation outcomes. Further properly designed randomized controlled trials using valid and reliable outcome measures with adequately powered sample sizes are warranted to enhance the current body of evidence using home-based virtual reality in cerebral palsy rehabilitation.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Funding

The authors received no direct funding for this research.

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