Stroke Clinical Trial
Official title:
Air Muscle and Task Practice in Upper Limb Stroke Rehab
Many patients who have sustained strokes are unable to effectively use their hemiparetic upper extremity. Limited mobility in the performance of daily activities, such as eating or dressing, adversely affects their quality of life and compromises independence. Rehabilitation techniques engaging the hemiparetic limb in repetitive task practice (RTP) may improve upper extremity function and quality of life in patients with stroke, but costs limit the number of patients that can utilize this type of therapy. Advances in microprocessor design and function make the use of an assistive device as an adjunct to RTP plausible. An innovative assistive repetitive motion (ARM) device using an "air muscle" has been developed specifically for the rehabilitation of the hemiparetic upper extremity. The primary aim of the proposed study is to collect pilot data to estimate the clinical effectiveness of using the ARM device in conjunction with RTP to improve upper extremity motor function and the quality of life of patients with stroke. Twenty sub-acute (3 to 9 mos. post-stoke) patients will be randomized to a RTP only or ARM + RTP group. The RTP group will receive 15 days (4 hours per day) of intensive one-on-one RTP therapy. The ARM + RTP group will use the ARM device for 2 hours per day and receive 2 hours of intensive RTP per day for 15 days. Clinical motor function and quality of life measures will be taken before and after the interventions and two months later. We hypothesize that the ARM + RTP group will exhibit greater improvements in motor function and quality of life measures than the RTP only group.
| Status | Completed |
| Enrollment | 24 |
| Est. completion date | March 2007 |
| Est. primary completion date | March 2007 |
| Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
| Gender | Both |
| Age group | 18 Years to 75 Years |
| Eligibility |
Inclusion criteria Patients will not be excluded because of somatosensory deficits or the
nature of previous physical interventions. We will not randomize patients on the basis of
side of stroke or hand dominance but will undertake secondary data analyses examining
these variables. In past applications of one form of RTP, CI therapy, to chronic stroke
patients in the laboratories of Taub and Miltner, there were no significant differences in
treatment effects for patients with right and left-sided strokes. In previous evaluations
of CI therapy, Taub did not find any difference in outcomes among the small percentage of
patients with pre-morbid left dominance. Therefore, there is no reason to exclude these
patients from participation. We believe that the motivation to improve use of an affected
pre-stroke non-dominant upper extremity is sufficiently strong to support profound
improvement from treating that limb as well as from treating the dominant limb.
Distributions of dominance and hand preference have been acquired from patients meeting
eligibility criteria in 1998 at several sites for determining participation of sites for
the EXCITE trial and side of cerebral pathology showed remarkably equal left-right
distribution. Exclusion criteria 1. a score of less than 24 on the Folstein Mini-Mental State Examination or a score of 36 or below on the Token Test of the Multilingual Aphasia Examination 2. a first stroke less than 3 months or more than 9 months prior to the initiation of therapy 3. less than 18 years old 4. clinical judgment of excessive frailty or lack of stamina (e.g., cannot attend to instructions, stay awake, engage in functional activities, etc.) 5. serious uncontrolled medical conditions 6. excessive pain in any joint of the more affected extremity that could limit ability to cooperate with the intervention, as judged by the examining clinician 7. passive range of motion less than 45 degrees for: abduction, flexion or external rotation at shoulder, or pronation of forearm; or greater than 30 degrees flexion contracture at any finger joint (patients who pass the motor criteria specified above do not tend to have the type of pain or limitation of movement that would exclude them from treatment) 8. unable to stand independently for 2 min., transfer independently to and from the toilet or perform sit-to-stand 9. current participation in other pharmacological or physical intervention studies, or have received injections of anti-spasticity drugs into upper extremity musculature within the past 3 months, or wish to have drugs injected in the foreseeable future 10. receiving any anti-spasticity drugs orally at the time of expected participation 11. received phenol injections less than 12 months prior to receiving therapy 12. contemplating a move from proximity to the treatment site in less than 1 year from the randomization date. Prospective patients who qualify but who have profound postural instability will undergo the intervention while walking with contact guarding or, when feasible, using their leg(s) and more involved arm to propel a wheelchair. |
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Health Services Research
| Country | Name | City | State |
|---|---|---|---|
| n/a | |||
| Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
|---|---|
| Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) |
| Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | Wolf Motor Function Test | 8 Weeks | No |
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