Zhongguo quanke yixue (Jul 2022)

Effects of Aquatic Therapeutic Exercise in Stroke Rehabilitation: an Overview of Systematic Reviews

  • Nannan HU, Hong GUO, Keke LIN, Ao ZHANG, Shanshan CHEN

DOI
https://doi.org/10.12114/j.issn.1007-9572.2022.0249
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 19
pp. 2421 – 2428

Abstract

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Background Aquatic therapeutic exercise is an emerging physical therapy technique, which provides new ideas for improving the motor function and quality of life of patients with stroke. However, it is not clear that the rehabilitation benefits obtained by patients with stroke from aquatic therapeutic exercise, and the levels of methodological quality and evidence quality of relevant studies. Objective To overview the systematic reviews of aquatic therapeutic exercise in improving the rehabilitation in patients with stroke. Methods In June 2021, Systematic reviews assessing the effects of aquatic therapeutic exercise in stroke rehabilitation were searched in databases of PubMed, the Cochrane Library, EmBase, CINAHL, Web of Science, CNKI, WanFang Data, CQVIP and SinoMed from inception to June 15, 2021. Two researchers screened systematic reviews according to the inclusion and exclusion criteria and extracted data separately. The methodological quality was evaluated using AMSTAR 2. The reporting quality was evaluated using the PRISMA. The quality of evidence for major outcomes was evaluated using the GRADE system. Results A total of 9 reviews were included, 2 of which were in Chinese and 7 were in English. The analysis showed that the methodological quality of 1, 1, and 7 reviews were moderate, low, and extremely low, respectively. The reporting quality of 7 reviews were relatively complete, 1 review had some flaws, and 1 review had a serious information flaw. There were a total of 9 outcome indicators, and 49 bodies of evidence, and the quality of bodies of evidence was mostly low or very low. Aquatic therapeutic exercise improved the balance function, mobility and muscle strength of stroke patients to a certain extent. And the rehabilitation benefits had proven to be more when it was used in combination with dryland trainings. Conclusion Aquatic therapeutic exercise has proven to be effective in improving balance function, mobility and muscle strength in stroke patients with good safety. But the overall methodological quality and quality of evidence for major outcomes of included systematic reviews are unsatisfactory. It is suggested that future studies use a larger sample size and an improved design, which will provide evidence-based guidance for clinical management of stroke rehabilitation with aquatic therapeutic exercise.

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