Stroke Clinical Trial
Official title:
Early Supported Discharge After Stroke in Bergen. An RCT Looking at the Collaboration Between Hospital Service and Primary Health Care.
The main purpose of this study is to evaluate the benefit of early supported discharge (ESD)
in rehabilitation of stroke patients in two different outpatient modalities.
In a collaborating study, changes in physical function as well as the patients' own
perception of physical function, pain and fatigue will be studied. In further collaborating
studies, health economics and organizational issues will also be evaluated.
Early supported discharge (ESD) seems to be at least as effective as hospital rehabilitation
after stroke, and possibly better. In this study patients with recent stroke will be
randomized to one of three different treatment arms:
- ESD with treatment at a day institution until 4 hrs. per day for up to 5 weeks
- ESD with treatment in the patients' home until 4 hrs. per day for up to 5 weeks
- Rehabilitation treatment "as usual", with a longer hospital stay, but without any
specific treatment or follow-up after discharge
The patients in the two ESD arms will in addition be followed closely by a multidisciplinary
coordinating team during the stay in hospital and the 5 week period of treatment after
discharge, and they will be offered follow-ups at 3 and 6 months after inclusion into the
study.
Patients in all 3 arms will be systematically examined with a set of measuring instruments
as well as objective physical and function tests. This will be performed at inclusion and at
3, 6, 12 and 24 months after inclusion.
In the collaborating study by physiotherapist Bente Gjelsvik a comparison between changes in
trunk control, balance, walking and ADL 3 months post stroke, as well as the patients'
perceptions of physical function, pain and fatigue, will be the main focus. To assess
function, functional change and possible differences between different interventions, there
is a need for reliable and valid outcome measures. As a basis for the use of the outcome
measure Trunk Impairment Scale (TIS) in this study, the TIS has been translated into
Norwegian, Trunk Impairment Scale - Norwegian version (TIS-NV) and will be examined for
measurement properties using data from the above study as well as data from patients with
brain damage recruited from the Department of Physical Rehabilitation Medicine, Haukeland
University Hospital. An examination of a possible connection between localisation and size
of the stroke and trunk control will also be performed, as characteristics of the stroke may
have therapeutic implications for the choice of intervention for the individual patient. The
research questions for the planned doctoral thesis for Bente Gjelsvik are therefore as
follows:
1. Is the TIS-NV reliable and valid in patients with brain damage?
2. Are changes in trunk control, balance, walking and daily activities, as well as pain
and fatigue 3 months post stroke different in patients who have received interventions
from different courses of rehabilitation in the study "Early supported discharge after
stroke in Bergen"? To which degree do the patients perceive problems related to
balance, physical activity, walking, pain and fatigue?
3. Is there a correlation between localization and size of the stroke as measured by
magnetic tomography, and the patients' trunk control? Are initial localization and size
of the stroke predictive for the patients' trunk control 3 months post stroke?
Another collaborating project is carried out by PhD candidate Hedda Døli (Language outcome
after stroke: lesion location, prognosis and consequences).
The aim of her first study in the PhD project is to investigate the relationship between
lesion location and aphasia severity one week post-stroke. Thereafter a follow-up study of
the same patients 12 months post-stroke investigates the prognosis of aphasia and the
variables that may influence recovery. In the third study the aim is to investigate the
health-related quality of life and the occurrence of depression in patients with aphasia.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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