Cerebrovascular Accident Clinical Trial
Official title:
Robot- Versus Mirror-Assisted Motor Interventions in Rehabilitating Upper-Limb Motor and Muscle Performance and Daily Functions Poststroke: A Comparative Effectiveness Study
The purpose of this proposal is 1) to compare the relative effects of the robotic rehabilitation (RR), mirror therapy (MT), and conventional intervention (CI), 2) to compare the effects of the combined therapy of the RR-Functional Electrical Stimulation (FES) and the RR-Placebo Intervention (PI), and 3) to identify the clinical predictors that will potentially influence the functional outcomes after interventions.
Emerging stroke rehabilitation therapies have shown promise for improving motor recovery
after stroke and involve elements of high-intensity and repetitive task-specific practice,
which might be the essential elements of treatment success. Two prominent examples of
advances in innovative rehabilitation therapies after stroke include robotic rehabilitation
(RR) and mirror therapy (MT). Based on the development of mechanical and biomedical
engineering, RR has emerged that incorporates therapeutic elements for success in motor
rehabilitation: high-intensity, repetitiveness, task-specificity, feedback, and bilateral
training into its design. MT has been proposed in the light of translational research of
mirror neurons. In MT, patients place a mirror beside the unaffected limb to block their
view of the affected limb, creating the illusion that both limbs are intact. The motor
visual input from MT facilitates the activations in the premotor, primary motor and
somatosensory areas, which enhance sensory, perception and motor abilities. The MT may be
used to restore sensory functions, improve grip/grasp strength and motor function. In
addition, an innovative technology, functional electrical stimulation (FES), is proposed as
an adjunct to assist in movement execution and increase the electric activity of muscles for
movement and the active range of motion in patients with low functioning. Robotic
rehabilitation that emphasizes muscle strengthening and motor restoration may be implemented
in combination with the FES to improve treatment outcomes in stroke patients with
moderate-to-severe motor impairments in movement performance and functional outcomes.
Despite these promises, research studies that investigate comparative efficacy of the rival
therapies and the effects of combined therapy relative to mono-therapy are lacking. An
additional gap in contemporary neurorehabilitation is the lack of sufficient information on
the threshold values of clinically significant change in a variety of functional domains
relevant for individualized medicine. In addition, research on the potential vales of
biomarkers (eg, level of oxidative stress) for use in outcomes study in intense
rehabilitation falls far behind disciplines of basic sciences. This proposed research
project will be devoted to comparative efficacy trials and clinimetric study to promote
evidence-based neurorehabilitation and translational research in stroke.
It has been called for comparative effectiveness research of the innovative treatments to
promote evidence-based practice and translational science in stroke motor rehabilitation.
Scientific evidence for comparative effectiveness research of RR versus MT on functional
outcomes (e.g., motor, muscle, sensory, and daily functions) and adverse physiological
responses (e.g., fatigue and oxidative responses) in stroke patients is limited. More
rigorous studies are needed to compare the efficacy of RR and MT with control intervention
(CI), to identify the predictors of treatment success, and to study change in functions
(motor, muscle, sensory, and daily) and level of fatigue and oxidative stress after intense
training in order to promote translational science in movement therapy. Therefore, this
comparative efficacy research aims at performing a randomized controlled trial (RCT) to (1)
verify the efficacy and motor control mechanisms of dose-matched RR, MT, and CI; (2) examine
whether RR combined with FES will enhance the effect of RR; (3) study the predictors of
treatment outcomes and clinimetric properties of the outcome measures. We hypothesize the RR
and MT groups would produce better performance in motor control, muscle function, sensory
function, daily functions, and quality of life than the CI group. We further hypothesize
that there will be a differential improvements in movement performance and sensory functions
between the RR and MT. Combined therapy of the RR and FES (RR-FES) will enhance the effect
of RR as compared with the RR plus placebo intervention (RR-PI).
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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