Saragih, Ita Daryanti
Gervais Willy
Lamora, Jean-Philippe
Batcho, Charles Sebiyo
Everard, Gauthier
[UCL]
Purpose: This meta-analysis aimed to quantify the effect of serious games over conventional therapy on upper-limb activity, balance, gait, fatigue, and cognitive functions in people with multiple sclerosis. Materials and methods: Search strategies were developed for PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, and Scopus. Studies were selected if participants were adults with multiple sclerosis; the intervention consisted of a virtual reality serious game-based program; the control group received conventional therapy; outcomes included upper limb activity, balance, gait, fatigue, or cognitive functions; and used a randomized controlled trial design. Data were synthesized using a standardized mean difference with a random-effects model. Results: From 2532 studies, seventeen trials were selected (n = 740). Overall, serious games programs effect on upper limb activity, gait, verbal memory, verbal fluency and attention seemed neutral. Balance functions appeared to be improved by semi-immersive virtual reality serious games (SMD = 0.48;95%CI = 0.12–0.84;p = 0.01;I2=0%), fatigue by treadmill serious games (SMD = 0.80;95%CI = 0.40– 1.20;p < 0.001) and visuo-spatial memory by semi-immersive virtual reality general cognitive serious games (SMD = 0.35;95%CI = 0.04–0.65;p = 0.03;I2=0%). Conclusion: This review suggests, with a very-low-to-low certainty of evidence, that while some specific serious games may improve balance, fatigue and visuo-spatial memory, their overall effect on upper limb activity, gait, and other cognitive functions appears neutral.
Bibliographic reference |
Saragih, Ita Daryanti ; Gervais Willy ; Lamora, Jean-Philippe ; Batcho, Charles Sebiyo ; Everard, Gauthier. Effect of serious games over conventional therapy in the rehabilitation of people with multiple sclerosis – a systematic review and meta-analysis. In: Disability and Rehabilitation, (2024) |
Permanent URL |
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/292705 |