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Dive into the research topics where Lamberto Piron is active.

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Featured researches published by Lamberto Piron.


Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine | 2009

eXeRCISeS FOR PAReTIC UPPeR LIMb AFTeR STROKe: A COMbINeD VIRTUAL-ReALITY AND TeLeMeDICINe APPROACH

Lamberto Piron; Andrea Turolla; Michela Agostini; Carla Zucconi; Feliciana Cortese; Mauro Zampolini; Mara Zannini; Mauro Dam; Laura Ventura; Michela Battauz; Paolo Tonin

OBJECTIVE Telerehabilitation enables a remotely controlled programme to be used to treat motor deficits in post-stroke patients. The effects of this telerehabilitation approach were compared with traditional motor rehabilitation methods. DESIGN Randomized single-blind controlled trial. PATIENTS A total of 36 patients with mild arm motor impairments due to ischaemic stroke in the region of the middle cerebral artery. METHODS The experimental treatment was a virtual reality-based system delivered via the Internet, which provided motor tasks to the patients from a remote rehabilitation facility. The control group underwent traditional physical therapy for the upper limb. Both treatments were of 4 weeks duration. All patients were assessed one month prior to therapy, at the commencement and termination of therapies and one month post-therapy, with the Fugl-Meyer Upper Extremity, the ABILHAND and the Ashworth scales. RESULTS Both rehabilitative therapies significantly improved all outcome scores after treatment, but only the Fugl-Meyer Upper Extremity scale showed differences in the comparison between groups. CONCLUSION Both strategies were effective, but the experimental approach induced better outcomes in motor performance. These results may favour early discharge from hospital sustained by a telerehabilitation programme, with potential beneficial effects on the use of available resources.


Journal of Neuroengineering and Rehabilitation | 2013

Virtual reality for the rehabilitation of the upper limb motor function after stroke: a prospective controlled trial

Andrea Turolla; Mauro Dam; Laura Ventura; Paolo Tonin; Michela Agostini; Carla Zucconi; Pawel Kiper; Annachiara Cagnin; Lamberto Piron

BackgroundRecent evidence has demonstrated the efficacy of Virtual Reality (VR) for stroke rehabilitation nonetheless its benefits and limitations in large population of patients have not yet been studied.ObjectivesTo evaluate the effectiveness of non-immersive VR treatment for the restoration of the upper limb motor function and its impact on the activities of daily living capacities in post-stroke patients.MethodsA pragmatic clinical trial was conducted among post-stroke patients admitted to our rehabilitation hospital. We enrolled 376 subjects who had a motor arm subscore on the Italian version of the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (It-NIHSS) between 1 and 3 and without severe neuropsychological impairments interfering with recovery. Patients were allocated to two treatments groups, receiving combined VR and upper limb conventional (ULC) therapy or ULC therapy alone. The treatment programs consisted of 2 hours of daily therapy, delivered 5 days per week, for 4 weeks. The outcome measures were the Fugl-Meyer Upper Extremity (F-M UE) and Functional Independence Measure (FIM) scales.ResultsBoth treatments significantly improved F-M UE and FIM scores, but the improvement obtained with VR rehabilitation was significantly greater than that achieved with ULC therapy alone. The estimated effect size of the minimal difference between groups in F-M UE and FIM scores was 2.5 ± 0.5 (P < 0.001) pts and 3.2 ± 1.2 (P = 0.007) pts, respectively.ConclusionsVR rehabilitation in post-stroke patients seems more effective than conventional interventions in restoring upper limb motor impairments and motor related functional abilities.Trial registrationItalian Ministry of Health IRCCS Research Programme 2590412


Presence: Teleoperators & Virtual Environments | 2005

Virtual environment training therapy for arm motor rehabilitation

Lamberto Piron; Paolo Tonin; Francesco Piccione; Vincenzo Iaia; Elena Trivello; Mauro Dam

Enhanced feedback provided by a virtual reality system has been shown to promote motor learning in normal subjects. We evaluated whether this approach could be useful for treating patients with motor deficits following brain lesions. Fifty subjects with mild to intermediate arm impairments due to stroke were selected for the study. The patients received treatment daily for one month, consisting of an hour of virtual-environment therapy with enhanced feedback. Before and after the therapy, we assessed the degree of motor impairment and autonomy in daily living activities using the Fugl-Meyer scale for the upper extremities and Functional Independence Measure, respectively. We also analyzed the velocity, duration, and morphology of a sequence of reaching movements, finally comparing the kinematic measures with the scores obtained on the clinical scales. The rehabilitation therapy yielded significant improvements over baseline values in the mean scores on the Fugl-Meyer and Functional Independence Measure scales. The mean Fugl-Meyer score correlated significantly with the duration and velocity of reaching movements. The collated data indicate that motor recovery in post-stroke patients may be promoted by the enhanced feedback provided in a virtual environment and that kinematic analysis of their movements provides reliable measures of motor function changes in response to treatment.


Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair | 2010

Controlling memory impairment in elderly adults using virtual reality memory training: a randomized controlled pilot study.

Gabriele Optale; Cosimo Urgesi; Valentina Busato; Silvia Marin; Lamberto Piron; Konstantinos Priftis; Luciano Gamberini; Salvatore Capodieci; Adalberto Bordin

Background. Memory decline is a prevalent aspect of aging but may also be the first sign of cognitive pathology. Virtual reality (VR) using immersion and interaction may provide new approaches to the treatment of memory deficits in elderly individuals. Objective. The authors implemented a VR training intervention to try to lessen cognitive decline and improve memory functions. Methods. The authors randomly assigned 36 elderly residents of a rest care facility (median age 80 years) who were impaired on the Verbal Story Recall Test either to the experimental group (EG) or the control group (CG). The EG underwent 6 months of VR memory training (VRMT) that involved auditory stimulation and VR experiences in path finding. The initial training phase lasted 3 months (3 auditory and 3 VR sessions every 2 weeks), and there was a booster training phase during the following 3 months (1 auditory and 1 VR session per week). The CG underwent equivalent face-to-face training sessions using music therapy. Both groups participated in social and creative and assisted-mobility activities. Neuropsychological and functional evaluations were performed at baseline, after the initial training phase, and after the booster training phase. Results.The EG showed significant improvements in memory tests, especially in long-term recall with an effect size of 0.7 and in several other aspects of cognition. In contrast, the CG showed progressive decline. Conclusions . The authors suggest that VRMT may improve memory function in elderly adults by enhancing focused attention.


Journal of Telemedicine and Telecare | 2008

Satisfaction with care in post-stroke patients undergoing a telerehabilitation programme at home

Lamberto Piron; Andrea Turolla; Paolo Tonin; Francesco Piccione; Lisa Lain; Mauro Dam

We conducted a pilot telerehabilitation study with post-stroke patients with arm motor impairment. We compared the degree of satisfaction of patients undergoing a virtual reality (VR) therapy programme at home (Tele-VR group) to satisfaction experienced by those undergoing the same VR therapy in a hospital setting (VR-group). The rehabilitation equipment used a 3D motion tracking system to create a virtual environment in which the patients movement was represented. In tele-therapy, the patient equipment was installed in their homes, connected to the hospital by four ISDN lines at a total bandwidth of 512 kbit/s. Rehabilitation data were transmitted via one line and videoconferencing via the other three. Ten patients with mild to intermediate arm motor impairment due to an ischaemic stroke, were randomized into VR or Tele-VR groups. A questionnaire was used at the end of treatment to measure each patients degree of satisfaction. Tele-VR treated patients showed median values equal to or higher than the VR group patients in all 12 items investigated, except one. In motor performance, the Tele-VR group improved significantly (P ≤ 0.05), while the VR group showed no significant change. Patients assigned to the Tele-VR group were able to engage in therapy at home and the videoconferencing system ensured a good relationship between the patient and the physical therapist whose physical proximity was not required.


Medical Informatics and The Internet in Medicine | 2004

Motor tele-rehabilitation in post-stroke patients

Lamberto Piron; Paolo Tonin; Elena Trivello; Leontino Battistin; Mauro Dam

Primary objective: The advanced communication technology may allow rehabilitative interventions to patients living at home from a remote provider. We evaluated the effects of a tele-rehabilitation system for the therapy of arm motor impairments due to a stroke. Research design: Experimental observational study. Methods and procedures: We selected five patients suffering from mild/intermediate arm motor impairments due to a long-lasting ischaemic stroke. Two workstations were utilized, one in the patients house and the other in the rehabilitation hospital, connected through the phone lines. A virtual reality based software allowed the patient to perform adequate motor tasks created by the physiotherapist. During performance, the patient could see not only their movement but also the correct trajectory that they had to accomplish. The feedback derived from the patients action, its outcome, and feedback from the supervision of the physiotherapist may favour the acquisition of new motor abilities. Main outcome measures: The arm motor performance and the activities of daily living were evaluated using the Fugl-Meyer and Functional Independence Measure scale, together with the determination of the velocity and duration of 10 representative reaching movements. Results: Subjects underwent the tele-rehabilitation programme for 4 weeks. The therapy significantly improved the Fugl-Meyer mean score, the mean duration and the velocity of the movements, but not the Functional Independence Measure scale score. Conclusions: These results indicated that this tele-rehabilitation system did not appear to adversely affect rehabilitation; rather it may improve arm motor deficits due to a stroke. If these evidences are further confirmed, tele-rehabilitation may represent a new home-based therapy to treat disabled people.


Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair | 2010

Motor Learning Principles for Rehabilitation: A Pilot Randomized Controlled Study in Poststroke Patients:

Lamberto Piron; Andrea Turolla; Michela Agostini; Carla Zucconi; Laura Ventura; Paolo Tonin; Mauro Dam

Background. Six months after a stroke, the hemiplegic arm often remains compromised. More innovative approaches to motor rehabilitation are needed. Objective. The authors compared a motor learning—based approach in a virtual environment with more conventional upper extremity therapy in a pilot trial. Methods . This prospective, single-blinded, randomized controlled trial compared reinforced feedback in a virtual environment (RFVE; n = 27) with a control intervention (n = 20) of progressive therapy for the affected upper extremity. Both treatments were provided for 4 weeks, 5 days per week, with 1-hour treatment sessions daily. The primary outcomes were the Fugl-Meyer Upper Extremity (F-M UE) and Functional Independence Measure (FIM) scores. Kinematic outcomes included mean duration (MD), mean linear velocity (MLV), and number of submovements to measure the motor performance. Analyses of the primary outcomes were performed per protocol and by intention to treat. Results. F-M UE scores improved significantly in the RFVE group compared with the conventional therapy group (“intention to treat” = 5.10 points, P = .004; ANCOVA = 4.26 points, P < .01). Several of the kinematic parameters improved in the RFVE group (MD, P < .01; MLV, P < .01). FIM improvements did not differ. Conclusions . Both rehabilitation therapies improved arm motor performance and functional activity, but the RFVE therapy induced more robust results in patients exposed to late rehabilitation treatment.


medicine meets virtual reality | 2001

Virtual Reality as an assessment tool for arm motor deficits after brain lesions.

Lamberto Piron; Federica Cenni; Paolo Tonin; Mauro Dam

The currently used assessment techniques for measuring neurological deficits are time consuming and may lack of sensibility and repeatability. Previous studies suggested that the cinematic analysis of the movement, might represent a reliable alternative instrument for documenting the degree of motor impairment. To verify this hypothesis we investigated motor/functional progress in 20 post-stroke patients, undergoing rehabilitation therapy, by means of a widely used clinical test (Fugl-Meyer scale), and by evaluating kinematics of arm motion. After rehabilitation therapy, velocity and duration of reaching movements significantly improved with respect to baseline values. Before and after rehabilitation there was a significant correlation between each cinematic parameter and the clinical scale scores. These results, suggests that the cinematic analysis of movement can be proposed as a precise and objective assessment tool to be used in clinical practice.


medicine meets virtual reality | 2003

The augmented-feedback rehabilitation technique facilitates the arm motor recovery in patients after a recent stroke.

Lamberto Piron; Paolo Tonin; Andrea Massimiliano Atzori; Carla Zucconi; Cristiano Massaro; Elena Trivello; Mauro Dam

Previous studies have shown that the motor training in a virtual-environment with the augmented feedback promotes motor learning in normal subjects and in long-term post-stroke patients. We evaluated whether this approach could be useful also for treating patients with arm motor deficits due to a recent stroke. Twenty-four patients were included in the study within 3 months from an ischemic stroke in the territory of the middle cerebral artery. Twelve subjects received virtual-environment-training (VET) therapy for the arm, and twelve patients received an equal amount of a conventional rehabilitation therapy focused to the upper limb. Before and after therapy, the autonomy of daily living activities were assessed with the Functional Independence Measure and the degree of motor impairment was measured with the Fugl-Meyer scale for the upper extremity. For both groups the therapy lasted from 5 to 7 weeks, 1 hour daily for five days a week. The VET therapy group showed 20,2% and 12,4% improvements in the Fugl-Meyer and the Functional Independence Measure scale mean scores respectively. In a comparable way, the conventional therapy determined significant, but smaller scores improvements: 11,3% and 9,1%, respectively. These data indicate that the recovery of arm motor function in patients after a recent stroke is promoted by an augmented feedback strategy applied through a virtual-environment.


2007 Virtual Rehabilitation | 2007

Reinforced Feedback in Virtual Environment Facilitates the Arm Motor Recovery in Patients after a Recent Stroke

Lamberto Piron; Paolo Tombolini; Andrea Turolla; Carla Zucconi; Michela Agostini; Mauro Dam; Giovanna Santarello; Francesco Piccione; Paolo Tonin

Previous studies have shown that the motor training in a virtual-environment with the augmented feedback promotes motor learning in normal subjects and in long-term post-stroke patients. We evaluated whether this approach could be useful also for treating patients with arm motor deficits due to a recent stroke. Thirty-eight patients were included in the study within 3 months from an ischemic stroke in the territory of the middle cerebral artery. Twenty-five subjects received training with the Reinforced Feedback in Virtual Environment (RFVE) therapy for the arm, and thirteen patients received an equal amount of a conventional rehabilitation (CR) therapy focused to the upper limb. Before and after therapy, the autonomy of daily living activities were assessed with the Functional Independence Measure (FIM) and the degree of motor impairment was measured with the Fugl-Meyer scale for the upper extremity (FM-UE). The RFVE therapy group showed significant improvements in the FM-UE and the FIM scale mean scores. The conventional therapy determined smaller and not statistically significant scores improvements. These data indicate that the recovery of arm motor function in patients after a recent stroke appear to be speeded up by an augmented feedback provided in a virtual-environment.

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Stefano Silvoni

Ca' Foscari University of Venice

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