Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine 51-4inkOmslag | Page 16

250 R. Stock et al. electronic dynamometer is valid (intra-class correlation (ICC) 0.98–0.99) compared with the Jamar hydraulic dynamometer and has excellent test-retest reliability (ICC 0.98–0.99). The advantages of electronic dynamometers are the sensitivity to record low grip force and the possibility to assess force-time characteristics. Pinchmeters can be used to obtain a reliable assessment of pinch strength in stroke patients (17, 18). All grip strength measurements were performed according to the recommendations of the American Society of Hand Thera- pists (ASHT) (19). The patients were seated with their shoulder in a neutral position, the elbow flexed to 90°, the wrist in a neutral position; the same chair was used for all measurements. The examiner explained and demonstrated the testing procedure. First, 2 trials with submaximal isometric contractions were performed to familiarize the participant with the equipment. Each MVC was performed 3 times in the 5 handle positions. The hands were tested alternately, with 30 s rest between the trials, i.e. 60 s rest before the same hand was tested again, as recommended by Watanabe et al. (20). Pinchmeter recordings were performed in the same manner in 3 different grip positions (see Fig. 1, F–H): key grip (holding the pinchmeter between the lateral side of the 2nd phalanx of the index finger and the tip of the thumb), 3-finger grip (holding the pinchmeter between the fingertips of the index finger, middle finger and thumb) and 2-finger grip (between the fingertips of the index finger and thumb). If the patient was not able to hold the instrument in a stable position, it was placed and gently held by the examiner in the correct position. During actual testing, the participants were instructed to grip as hard as possible, and were encouraged verbally, as follows: “Harder...Harder...Relax” (21). Rate of force development and sustainability of grip force A 0–0.5-s time interval was chosen to evaluate rate of force development (22). Sustainability of grip force can be measured in absolute values (23) or as the percentage or ratio of the mo- mentary force value relative to maximum force (24, 25), which makes it possible to express how much the individual force curves drop during a given period. Both absolute and relative values are reported in the current study. The measurements of rate of force development and sustainability of grip force were performed once in both the affected and the non-affected hand with a hand dynamometer (position 2) and pinchmeter (key grip). The participants were instructed to increase grip force as fast as possible, followed by the instruction “hold as hard as you can” for 15 s. was assessed by visual inspection of quantile-quantile (Q-Q) plots. Due to multiple comparisons between the 2 hands during 5 time-points and 5 grip positions, the possibility for Type II error was high. p-values < 0.05 were therefore regarded as indicating a possible difference between the hands. RESULTS Of the 47 patients included in the NORCIMT study, 14 were recruited from Trondheim University Hospital. Of these, 11 participants had available data on maximum grip force, rate of force development and sustainability of grip force of the affected and non-affected hands. Table I presents the baseline characteristics of the 11 patients included in the study. The participants were middle-aged to elderly and mostly men. The Fugl- Meyer score for the upper extremity indicates that the patients had mild to moderate reduction in motor function. Disability (Modified Rankin Scale) ranged from slight disability to moderate disability. One patient missed the follow-up assessments at W28, W30, and W54 for the non-affected side because of pain due to overload of the non-affected hand during walking with walking aids. More than 3 s was needed to reach maximum force during some recordings. As a result, 7% (15/214) of the sustained curve recordings were shorter than 12 s (mean 9.3 s (SD 2.1)). One patient had an additional minor stroke after 28 weeks, which did not result in a pronounced difference in grip strength parameters, except that the force curve dropped markedly faster during sustained grip on the non-affected side at W30, but not at W54. The assessment of the onset of the force-time curves by 2 independent raters showed excellent agreement: ICC (3,1) = 0.98. Power grip strength Patients reached the highest maximum force values in hand grip position 2 for both the affected and Statistical analysis Stata (StataCorp. 2017. Stata Statistical Software: Release 15. College Station, TX: StataCorp LLC) was used for the statistical analyses. Background variables were reported as mean (standard deviation (SD)) or median (range) when non-normally distri- buted. Differences between the affected and non-affected hand were analysed by independent t-test, or by the Mann˗Whitney U test when the data were non-normally distributed. The onset of the force-time curve was visually determined by 2 independent raters as the point where the curve starts to rise after stable base- line measurements. In case of disagreement on the onset point, the raters reached consensus through discussion. ICC (3,1) was used to determine the degree of agreement between the 2 raters. Last observation carried forward was applied where observa- tions were missing in the non-affected hand. Normal distribution www.medicaljournals.se/jrm Table I. Baseline characteristics of participants ( n  = 11) Characteristics Values Age, years, mean (SD) [range] Females, n (%) Days post-stroke, mean (SD) [range] National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (0–42), mean (SD) [range] Fugl-Meyer Assessment of the upper extremity (0–66), mean (SD) [range] Modified Rankin Scale (0–6), mean (SD) [range] Affected side, right, n (%) Dominant side affected, n (%) Ischaemic stroke, n (%) New stroke after inclusion, n (%) 59.1 (11) [44–78] 3 (27) 16.4 (7) [7–29] SD: standard deviation. 3 (2) [0–6] 48.7 (7) [32–61] 2.6 (1) [2–4] 6 (55) 7 (64) 11 (100) 1 (9)