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Effect of the Sway Bed on Autonomic Response, Emotional Responses, and Muscle Hardness in Children with Severe Motor and Intellectual Disabilities: A Pilot Study.

Mitsuki OzakiJun MurataKatsuya SatoGoro TanakaAkira ImamuraRyoichiro Iwanaga
Published in: Healthcare (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
This cross-sectional study aimed to examine the effects of being swayed in a sway bed on children with severe motor and intellectual difficulties by examining potential differences in their autonomic and emotional responses, as well as their muscle hardness, and by comparing them with "a control condition without any stimulation". Children's heart rate variability, rectus femoris hardness, and passive hip abduction range of motion (ROM) were measured in two experimental conditions, differentiated by the presence of a 5-min sway stimulus. In each condition, the children's faces were video-recorded and retrospectively rated subjectively by their homeroom teacher concerning the visible expression of eight emotions. Significant intervention-related effects were observed on the heart rate variability and the "Relax" item of the emotional response indicators but not on muscle hardness or hip ROM. Our findings provide evidence that using a motorized sway bed can promote relaxation in children with severe motor and intellectual disabilities by influencing their autonomic response.
Keyphrases
  • heart rate variability
  • heart rate
  • young adults
  • skeletal muscle
  • randomized controlled trial
  • blood pressure
  • risk assessment
  • drug induced
  • binding protein
  • psychometric properties