>> ASIAONE / DIGITAL / NEWS / STORY
Wii may aid stroke victims
Sat, Feb 27, 2010
AsiaOne

WASHINGTON - PLAYING on a virtual reality gaming system may help stroke patients improve their motor function, according to a small study presented on Thursday at a conference of the American Stroke Association.

'This is the first randomised clinical study showing that virtual reality using Wii gaming technology is feasible and safe and is potentially effective in enhancing motor function following a stroke,' said Gustavo Saposnik, who led the study.

Twenty stroke survivors were randomly assigned to play either two Wii games - Wii tennis and Wii 'Cooking Mama,' in which players simulate cutting a potato, peeling an onion, slicing meat and shredding cheese - or to play cards or a game called Jenga, which involves stacking and balancing wooden blocks.

Both groups played eight hour-long sessions of Wii, or cards and blocks, over the period of two weeks. Participants had suffered a stroke around two months previous.

No one in the Wii group suffered adverse effects in the study, while one person in the card or block-stacking group had nausea or dizziness during the study.

The study focused on getting the patients to move their impaired arms to help small- and large-muscle motor function, and the group that used the Wii showed 'significant motor improvement in speed and extent of recovery,' the researchers said. -- AFP

 

 

 

 

Bookmark and Share
 

 
STORY INDEX
 
  Wii may aid stroke victims
   
 
  Watching the Games? Switch on your cellphone
   
 
  TigerText app erases phone message tracks
   
 
  China's Wen to chat with online users
   
 
  Facebook patents update feeds
   
 
  Read 900,000 digital books for free on S'pore-made e-reader
   
 
  Nintendo to launch bigger console in Europe, US next month
   
 
  Talking up the market
   
 
  Isolated Australia at forefront of social networking craze
   
 
  460,000 young Web addicts in Guangdong
   
We welcome contributions, comments and tips.
a1admin@sph.com.sg
Search AsiaOne: