Manual ability and its relationship with daily activities in adolescents with cerebral palsy.

Authors

  • Mirjam van Eck
  • Annet Dallmeijer
  • Ilse S. van Lith
  • Jeanine M. Voorman
  • Jules Becher

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-0543

Keywords:

manual ability, cerebral palsy, daily activities, adolescents.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe the manual ability of adolescents with cerebral palsy and to investigate the relationship of manual ability with daily activities. DESIGN: Cross-sectional study. SUBJECTS: Ninety-four adolescents with cerebral palsy, aged 12-16 years. METHODS: Manual ability was assessed according to the Manual Ability Classification System (MACS) and the ABILHAND-Kids. Daily activities were assessed with the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales (VABS) sub-scales for (personal and domestic) daily living skills. The relationship between manual ability and daily activities was investigated with regression analysis: independent variables were manual ability, disease and personal characteristics. RESULTS: MACS and ABILHAND-Kids were both strongly associated with personal daily activities (explained variance 77% and 84%, respectively) and less strongly with domestic daily activities (explained variance 45% and 62%, respectively). Including other disease characteristics and personal characteristics in the model increased the explained variance of personal daily activities to 91% for both models and the explained variance of domestic daily activities to 68% and 73% for the MACS and ABILHAND-Kids models, respectively. CONCLUSION: Manual ability is limited in many adolescents with cerebral palsy, and limitations in manual ability are strongly related to limitations in daily activities.

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Published

2010-04-20

How to Cite

van Eck, M., Dallmeijer, A., van Lith, I. S., Voorman, J. M., & Becher, J. (2010). Manual ability and its relationship with daily activities in adolescents with cerebral palsy. Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 42(5), 493–498. https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-0543

Issue

Section

Original Report