Stroke Clinical Trial
Official title:
Trunk Restraint Therapy: the Continuous Use of the Harness Could Promote Feedback Dependence in Post-stroke Patients. A Randomized Trial.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the long-term effects of the task-specific training with trunk restraint comparing to the free one in post-stroke reaching movements. Twenty hemiparetic chronic stroke patients were selected and randomized into two training groups: Trunk restraint group - TRG (reaching training with trunk restraint) and Trunk free group - TFG (unrestraint reaching). Twenty sessions with forty-five minutes of training were accomplished. The subjects were evaluated in pre-treatment (PRE), post-treatment (POST) and three months after the completed training (RET). The measures administered were the Modified Ashworth Scale, Barthel Index, Fugl-Meyer Scale and kinematic analysis (movement trajectory, velocity, angles).
Twenty stroke subjects were recruited from the Physiotherapy and Occupational Therapy
Outpatient Unit of the University Hospital at Campinas - UNICAMP and all of them signed
informed consent forms previously approved by the Research Ethics Committee of the
University (#110/2004). Ten healthy subjects were also selected to obtain normal reference
parameters of kinematic assessment. Patients had sustained a single and chronic (>6 months
post-event) unilateral stroke of non-traumatic origin, with hemiparetic sequel in the upper
limb, could understand simple instructions, perform community gait, and had a good sitting
balance. Those with shoulder pain or other neurological and orthopedic conditions affecting
the reaching movement ability or trunk, hemispatial neglect or apraxia were excluded. The
patients who met the inclusion criteria were stratified to one of two groups. A sealed
opaque envelope containing a single cheat of paper marked with numbers 1 (group 1) or 2
(group 2), was used to allocate the patient. This procedure was made by an external
assessor. The patients were not informed about the different treatment groups and therefore,
they were blind for the type of intervention applied.
The muscle tone (shoulder and elbow flexors) was evaluated using the Modified Ashworth Scale
(MAS)9; motor impairment was evaluated using the upper limb section of Fugl-Meyer Assessment
Scale (FM) and activities of daily living was assessed by the Barthel Index (BI). Kinematic
data were recorded by an infrared system of motion analysis (Qualisys Motion Capture System
- 2.57 Sweden) with sample frequency of 240 Hz, during 8 seconds. The coordinated data was
low-pass filtered using a 6 Hz, finite impulse response filter with order 26 using the
Matlab software. Five infrared reflexive markers were used. For the kinematic capture, the
subjects were seated in a chair and invited to fit a cone in a target placed within arm's
length (measured on the non-affected arm from the medial border of axilla to the distal
wrist crease). The target was placed so that only the arm movement was required to reach the
target. The initial hand position of the affected arm was on the lateral trunk, with the
shoulder in neutral position and the elbow close to the side of the body (90°). Three trials
of 6 to 8 seconds' time were recorded and a media was used to calculate the evaluated
data.From the collected dates, values concerning to sagittal (YZ), horizontal (XY) and
3-dimensional (XYZ) planes were computed.
Trunk displacement was verified in millimeters as sagittal movement of marker 3.
Index of curvature was measured from marker 5. This index shows the straightness of the
wrist trajectory from the initial position to the goal, resulting in a ratio of actual end
point path to a straight line (index = 1, whereas a semicircle has an index of 1.57).
Shoulder angles were calculated using 2 vectors formed from marker 1 to marker 2, and from
marker 2 to marker 4; with flexion/extension movements in sagittal plane and
adduction/abduction movement in horizontal plane. Full horizontal abduction and the
anatomical position were considered at 0°. Flexion/extension elbow angles were measured
using 2 vectors formed from marker 2 to 4 and from marker 4 to 5, using the sagittal and
horizontal planes. The elbow full extension was considered at 180°.
Movement time was defined as differences between movement onsets and offsets which
tangential velocity rose above and fell below at 5% of its peak value.
The maximum tangential velocity of the arm was computed from the velocity vector expressed
by a numerical differentiation from wrist and sternum markers in the 3-dimensional plane.
Numbers of peaks and the percentage of movement time at the maximum peak velocity (rate - %)
were extracted from tangential velocity traces.
The evaluations were performed by a blind researcher, in admission time (PRE), after the end
of the twenty treatment sessions (POST) and three months after the training was completed
(retention test - RET).
The selected patients were randomized individually into two training groups:
Trunk restraint group - TRG (n = 10): reaching training with trunk restraint by a harness
that limited the trunk movements.
Trunk free group - TFG (n = 10): unrestraint reaching training, only with verbal feedback to
maintain the trunk right position.
Forty-five training minutes, twice a week, totaling twenty sessions, were performed (The
participants will be trained for 10 weeks, and with 3 months of follow-up).
The training was based in the motor learning concepts including repetitive and task-specific
practice. The training task consisted of grasping a cone (3.5 cm diameter base, 13 cm high)
and fitting random targets as requested by the therapist in a training platform (54 cm
length, 64 cm extent, 1.5 cm high) with 9 targets (6.5 cm diameter) placed 10-13 cm apart,
along 3 lines. The targets that were ordered in a way that stimulated the complete range of
motion of shoulder and elbow, had pictures, colors, letters and numbers on them yielding
variability and feedback to the performing tasks.
Chi-squared, or Fisher's tests, was used to compare the categorical variables (i.e. gender)
between the three groups (HS, TRG, TFG). Mann-Whitney (for two groups) and Kruskal-Wallis
(for three groups) tests were used to compare the ratio dates (i.e. age, years since stroke)
measured at a single instant. Repeated-measure analysis of variance (ANOVA) and appropriate
post-hoc tests (Bonferroni) were applied to compare the numerical variables (i.e. kinematics
dates) between groups and instants. The normality of the kinematic variables was detected by
Shapiro-Francia test and for variables that were not normal was proposed Box-Cox
transformation. The significance level adopted for the statistical tests was 5% (p< 0.05).
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator)
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