Virtual Reality Therapy Designed to Help Stroke Patients Recover – R & D Magazine

Posted: August 18, 2017 at 5:16 am

Benefits of virtual reality

In addition to making rehabilitation more enjoyable for the patients, virtual reality also has the potential to improve rehabilitation outcomes compared to traditional exercise-based therapies. By using an avatar in a virtual reality environment, healthcare professionals can directly stimulate not only the body of the patient, but their brain.

We know that if you see another person doing movement, you activate the brain regions that normally activate when you do the same movement, explained Serino. By having an avatar in our MindMotion Pro machine which represents the movement of the patients while the patient is moving, we are stimulating both the motor cortex to produce the movement, and an action observation loop to activate the brain regions that have been damaged by the stroke.

Patients that have no mobility on one side of the body can enter a virtual reality environment and participate in games that require them to move only their working arm. At the same time, their avatar can move the opposite arm, activating the areas that correspond to the damaged part of their cortex.

There is also potential to pair this type of virtual reality technology with robotics technologies that could physically move a paralyzed limb during this exercise.

Utilizing virtual reality for stroke rehabilitation also has benefits for the clinicians that work with these patients. Intensive, repetitive movements continued over a long duration have proven to be the best way for a patient to recover from a stroke. However, this type of treatment requires significant supervision and effort from medical personal.

A virtual reality machine can guide the patient in these repetitive exercises, allowing them to train more often and with increased intensity, while requiring a lower level of supervision and assistance. In addition, the machine monitors each patients progress, allowing healthcare providers to track and update their treatment regimen more specifically.

Whats Next

MindMaze is working to expand their MindMotion offerings for stroke rehabilitation virtual reality technology.

The idea of MindMotion is to take care of patients from the beginning of their disease to the end, said Serino. We want to help patients all along the journey of their rehabilitationfrom the acute care units, to the rehabilitation units, to the outpatient screenings, and when they go home. This means that you cannot have a single device to do all of these things, because depending on the status of the patient, and the phase of the disease, you will need different approaches and different technologies with different ideas behind them.

In addition to MindMotion Pro, MindMaze has already developed MindMotion Go, which was created for patients in the later phases of stroke recovery. This is meant to be used in clinics and incorporates more gamified types of exercise.

There is also potential to branch out into other neurological diseases, although Serino said MindMaze wants to focus their resources on providing care to stroke patients first. However, he sees future applications for this technology for patients with multiple sclerosis, Parkinsons disease, or those with dementia and mild cognitive impairment. He also sees potential for these devices to be used in children suffering from attention challenges or other cognitive challenges.

As virtual reality continues to take off within healthcare, and specifically within the neurological space, it is important that new technologies are designed with thought and care to the specific disease they are treating, said Serino.

Virtual reality has such good potential for the rehabilitation field that for sure it will continue to develop, but I think the challenge is how we do that, he said. We are now in the moment where we have to define how we are going to use this technology in healthcare. We have to do it in a way that really incorporates the rehabilitation techniques that we already know. We have to use it with a sufficient level of complexity so that we can implement the knowledge we have from the field of neuroscience. That will be the way that we really benefit from this technology.

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Virtual Reality Therapy Designed to Help Stroke Patients Recover - R & D Magazine

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