Stroke Clinical Trial
Official title:
Simultaneous Bimanual Training to Improve Motor Function Post-Stroke
The purpose of this study is to examine if practicing joint movements using specially designed devices can help in the recovery of muscle function in the arm/hand after a stroke. Subjects may qualify for participation in this study because they had a stroke and have had difficulty using their affected arm/hand ever since.
Stroke is a leading cause of long-term adult disability in the United States, and hemiparesis
is the most common motor impairment that frequently leads to persistent deficits in hand
function. The mechanisms of recovery of hand motor function after stroke are poorly
understood, and the protocols used in clinical practice lack a solid scientific rationale.
The long-term objective of this research is to understand the neural mechanisms underlying
the recovery of voluntary motor functions in brain-injured patients in order to provide a
more objective and scientific basis to rehabilitation protocols used in clinical practice.
These devices will be used to facilitate the training of either unimanual or bimanual
movements that can be used both in the acute and chronic post-stroke period, even when there
is little active movement in the affected upper extremity. The specially designed mechanical
devices (BAT, PST and WIFIT), Psychophysical methods using an instrumented glove, and
electromyographic recordings from upper extremity muscles to investigate the following
specific aims in patients with post-stroke hemiparesis will lead to:
- greater extensor muscle activation and out of synergy movement compared with unimanual
training facilitated by an external agent (e.g. another person).
- Bimanual training with the specially designed mechanical devices (BAT, PST and WIFIT)
over 6 weeks will produce greater functional recovery in the affected upper extremity in
patients with post-stroke hemiparesis, compared with conventional therapy.
- The gains in motor control and function will be greater in patients who begin bimanual
training in the acute post-stroke phase (0-6) months, compared with those that begin in
the chronic post-stroke phase (> 6 months).
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