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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT00565045
Other study ID # R21HD054749
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase Phase 1/Phase 2
First received
Last updated
Start date July 2007
Est. completion date April 2010

Study information

Verified date November 2018
Source MetroHealth Medical Center
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Impaired hand function is one of the most frequently persisting consequences of stroke. The purpose of this study is to investigate whether two different types of treatment improve recovery of hand function after stroke.


Description:

Loss of hand function is common after stroke. Previous research suggests that treatments that focus on movement of both hands at the same time or treatments that electrically stimulate the paretic (weak) hand muscles may help the recovery of hand function after stroke. In this study, two electrical stimulation treatments will be compared in their effectiveness in restoring hand movement and hand function. One of the treatments is stimulation only, and the other is stimulation linked to movement of the contralateral hand.

Study participants will be stroke survivors who are enrolled while they are still within their first 6 months after their stroke. After enrolling, their hand movement and function will be tested. Then they will be randomly assigned to one of the two treatments. Each treatment will last 6 weeks. The treatment will require the participant to perform specific exercises at home for a total of 2 hours every day and to come to the laboratory twice a week for study-related occupational therapy. At the end of the 6-week treatment, tests of hand movement and hand function will be repeated. The same tests will be repeated again at 1 and 3 months after the end of treatment to see if the effects of the treatment persist as time goes on. Changes in upper extremity impairment and activity limitation will be compared across treatment groups.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 21
Est. completion date April 2010
Est. primary completion date April 2010
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years to 80 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Age 18 to 80

- Within 6 months of first clinical hemorrhagic or nonhemorrhagic stroke

- Cortical or subcortical stroke

- Unilateral upper extremity hemiparesis with severe finger extensor and flexor paresis (<= grade 4 on Medical Research Council (MRC) scale)

- Adequate movement of the shoulder and elbow to allow volitional positioning of the affected hand in the workspace.

- Surface NMES of finger and thumb extensors produces functional hand opening without pain

- Full volitional opening of the contralateral hand of the unimpaired side.

- Able to follow 3 stage commands

- Able to remember at least 2 of 3 items after 30 minutes

- Able to hear and respond (by opening the less affected hand) to auditory cues issued from the stimulator?

- Caregiver available and willing to help assist with the device and home regimen and ensure compliance

- Skin intact on hemiparetic arm

- Medically stable

Exclusion Criteria:

- Insensate forearm and/or hand

- Edema of the affected forearm and/or hand

- History of potentially fatal cardiac arrhythmias.

- Cardiac pacemakers or any other implanted electronic systems

- Pregnant women

- Uncontrolled seizure disorder

- Severely impaired cognition or comprehension

- Uncompensated hemineglect

- Severe depression (>= 13 on Beck Depression Inventory Fast Screen)

- Ipsilateral lower motor neuron lesion

- Parkinson's Disease

- Spinal cord injury

- Traumatic brain injury

- Multiple sclerosis

- Lack of functional passive range of motion of the wrist or fingers of affected side

- Severe shoulder or hand pain (unable to volitionally position hand in the workspace without pain)

- Intramuscular botulinum toxin injections in upper extremity muscle in the last 3 months

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Device:
Neuromuscular electrical stimulator
Intervention Characteristics Common to Both Groups • 6-week intervention Home "exercise", daily Exercise (at home) 2 sessions/day A "session" consists of 3 (for CCFES) or 4 (for cNMES) 15-min sets separated by 5 min rest A "set" entails hand opening, closing, and relaxing in response or synchrony to light and sound cues and according to group-specific instructions Lab "therapy", 2x/week Two 1.5-hr sessions/week, working on functional hand tasks and tracking task (if possible).

Locations

Country Name City State
United States MetroHealth Medical Center Cleveland Ohio

Sponsors (3)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
MetroHealth Medical Center Case Western Reserve University, National Institutes of Health (NIH)

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

References & Publications (6)

Chae J, Bethoux F, Bohine T, Dobos L, Davis T, Friedl A. Neuromuscular stimulation for upper extremity motor and functional recovery in acute hemiplegia. Stroke. 1998 May;29(5):975-9. — View Citation

Glanz M, Klawansky S, Stason W, Berkey C, Chalmers TC. Functional electrostimulation in poststroke rehabilitation: a meta-analysis of the randomized controlled trials. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 1996 Jun;77(6):549-53. — View Citation

Knutson JS, Harley MY, Hisel TZ, Chae J. Improving hand function in stroke survivors: a pilot study of contralaterally controlled functional electric stimulation in chronic hemiplegia. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2007 Apr;88(4):513-20. — View Citation

Luft AR, McCombe-Waller S, Whitall J, Forrester LW, Macko R, Sorkin JD, Schulz JB, Goldberg AP, Hanley DF. Repetitive bilateral arm training and motor cortex activation in chronic stroke: a randomized controlled trial. JAMA. 2004 Oct 20;292(15):1853-61. Erratum in: JAMA. 2004 Nov 24;292(20):2470. — View Citation

Mudie MH, Matyas TA. Can simultaneous bilateral movement involve the undamaged hemisphere in reconstruction of neural networks damaged by stroke? Disabil Rehabil. 2000 Jan 10-20;22(1-2):23-37. — View Citation

Whitall J, McCombe Waller S, Silver KH, Macko RF. Repetitive bilateral arm training with rhythmic auditory cueing improves motor function in chronic hemiparetic stroke. Stroke. 2000 Oct;31(10):2390-5. Erratum in: Stroke. 2007 May;38(5):e22. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Maximum Voluntary Finger Extension Angle (a Measure of Hand Impairment) A custom-built electrogoniometer recorded the angles of the metacarpophalangeal (MP) and proximal interphalangeal (PIP) joints of the index finger simultaneously. Participants were seated with the forearm and wrist supported and stabilized in a neutral posture. From this resting postion, they were instructed to extend their fingers as fully as possible in response to a 4-sec audio cue. The MP and PIP angles were added together, providing a composite measure of degree of finger extension, where 0 degrees corresponds to full extension of the MP and PIP joints. The more negative the angle, the more flexed the finger. 3 months post-treatment.
Secondary Finger Tracking Error A 30-sec 0.1Hz sine wave track scrolled from right to left on a computer screen in front of the participant. The amplitude of the sine wave was scaled to match the middle 70% of the participant's voluntary finger active range of motion (AROM). A cursor on the computer screen moved up and down as the participant extended and flexed their index finger. The task was to trace the scrolling sine wave with the cursor. Tracking error was the average vertical distance between the cursor and the target trace. Since the track was scaled to the participant's finger AROM, the distance between the cursor and the target trace (and therefore the tracking error) is in units corresponding to the percentage (%) of the participant's finger active range of motion (AROM), hereafter abbreviated %AROM. 3 months post-treatment.
Secondary Box and Blocks Score The number of blocks picked up and moved across a barrier in 60 seconds 3 months post-treatment.
Secondary Arm Motor Abilities Test The Arm Motor Abilities Test (AMAT) score is an average across 9 different compound activities of daily living (ADL) tasks composed of 1 to 3 component tasks, each of which was scored by a therapist using a 0 to 5 ordinal scale: 0, no attempt to use affected limb; 1, attempt to use affected limb but it doesn't participate functionally; 2, affected limb is used only as a helper or stabilizer; 3, affected limb is used slowly or within synergy patterns; 4, affected limb use almost normal; 5, normal use. Each of the 9 tasks is scored and then the average score across the 9 tasks is calculated, with a range of 0 to 5. 3 months post-treatment.
Secondary Fugl-Meyer Assessment (Upper Extremity) The participant was asked to perform specific coordinated and isolated shoulder, elbow, wrist, and hand movements. Each movement was rated by a therapist using a 3-point ordinal scale: 0, cannot perform; 1, perform partially; 2, perform fully) and summed to produce an overall score, with a range of 0 to 66 (the higher the score the better). 3 months post-treatment.
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