Innovative Assistive Technologies for Tetraplegia: A Narrative Review of Systematic and Emerging Evidence
Lorenzo Desideri, Regina Gregori Grgič, Antonia Pirrera, Daniele Giansanti

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent evidence on assistive technologies for tetraplegia, highlighting trends, gaps, and the need for better integration and evaluation.
Contribution
A structured synthesis of review-level evidence on assistive technologies for tetraplegia, emphasizing multidisciplinary integration and emerging AI applications.
Findings
Evidence shows a shift toward personalized, adaptive, and interoperable assistive systems.
Common limitations include inconsistent outcome measures and limited longitudinal data.
AI is emerging as a tool for adaptive control and personalization but lacks robust clinical validation.
Abstract
Background: Assistive technologies (ATs) for individuals with tetraplegia have evolved from mechanical aids to complex neurotechnological, digital, and psychosocial systems. However, the evidence base remains fragmented, with heterogeneous methodologies and limited integration across domains. This review synthesizes recent review-level evidence to clarify current trends, gaps, and directions in ATs for tetraplegia. Methods: A narrative review of reviews was conducted following the ANDJ checklist. PubMed and Scopus were searched for systematic, scoping, and narrative reviews addressing assistive technologies relevant to tetraplegia. After screening, de-duplication, and quality appraisal, 20 reviews were included and synthesized narratively. Results: The included reviews clustered into four main domains: neural and regenerative interfaces, motor and biomechanical assistive systems,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNerve Injury and Rehabilitation · Spinal Cord Injury Research · Prosthetics and Rehabilitation Robotics
