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Practicing everyday tasks aids mobility
after Stroke
Newswise — Repetitive
training that simulates everyday leg
function can help people walk more easily
after stroke, according to a new review of
studies. Practicing everyday tasks resulted
in modest gains in walking speed, walking
distance and patients’ ability to stand up,
the review found.
The analysis appears in
the latest issue of The Cochrane Library,
a publication of The Cochrane Collaboration,
an international organization that evaluates
medical research.
Systematic reviews draw
evidence-based conclusions about medical
practice after considering both the content
and quality of existing medical trials on a
topic.
“People who had
repetitive task training were able to go 50
meters farther in six minutes compared to
people who hadn’t,” said lead review author
Beverley French. She is a senior research
fellow at the University of Central
Lancashire in England.
In the real world that
distance equates to being able to cross an
intersection while the walk sign remains lit
or to go from a parking lot into a grocery
store, she said.
The review gathers
evidence from 14 trials with more than 650
study participants.
In the studies,
patients repeatedly practiced everyday tasks
or the movements associated with the tasks,
like buttoning clothes, walking up steps,
reaching for items on shelves or standing up
from sitting.
“The idea of repeatedly
practicing tasks is based on the thought
that you can re-pattern the damaged brain,”
French said.
The analysis found that
repetitive task training is effective — and
does result in health gains for stroke
patients — but did not determine whether the
approach is better than other rehabilitation
interventions.
French said that
repetitive task training is not a method of
therapy; rather, many therapies can
incorporate the technique as “an
underpinning for everything a therapist does
with a patient.”
The therapy typically
lasted for one-hour sessions, three to five
times a week for six to eight weeks.
Researchers tested both arm and leg mobility
in the studies, but the review only found
significant improvements for lower limb
function. Moreover, it is not clear if the
gains in leg mobility were permanent.
“The measurement of
lasting effects wasn’t good enough to be
conclusive,” French said.
The analyzed studies
included a mix of patients, people who had
had a stroke recently and those who suffered
a stroke years in the past. Both groups of
patients experienced similar health gains.
“There’s this idea that
people with chronic stroke can’t improve;
our evidence didn’t support that,” French
said.
One other review in the
current issue of The Cochrane Library
also explores gait training —assisting
people with walking ability — after stroke.
That review found that
physical therapy after stroke that
incorporated electromechanical devices for
gait training was better than usual care.
The programmed robotic
devices support and steady a patient’s body
weight while footplates guide the legs
through repeated walking movements. People
who rely on a wheelchair and are unable to
stand or walk alone are the most common
users of the devices.
All of the
electromechanical devices analyzed in the
review performed about equally.
“Gait training with
electromechanical devices is better than
without such devices if ambulation is the
main goal of people who have had a stroke,”
said lead review author Jan Mehrholz.
He is a researcher in
the Department of Public Health, Technical
University of Dresden and physical therapist
in the Department of Early Rehabilitation at
The Klinik Bavaria in Kreischa, Germany.
Mehrholz said the
devices increased the chance that patients
regained the ability to walk without help.
“Walking dependency is
a major problem after stroke for patients
and their relatives,” Mehrholz said. “To be
able to walk without any assistance is
therefore a major goal for many people.”
“If electromechanical
devices are used in gait rehab, one of four
people with stroke would now be able to walk
alone again,” he said. Three of four people
with stroke remain dependent in walking or
need assistance even if they use the devices
in rehabilitation.
The Cochrane analysis
compiles evidence from eight studies,
including both published and unpublished
data, on more than 400 participants.
The health gains
documented in the review might allow a
patient to move around at home, in the bath
or kitchen.
However, rehabilitation
researcher Clare Bassile says health
professionals are also looking for evidence
of therapies that get stroke patients moving
outside of the home.
“This review doesn’t
really address the patient’s community
ambulation abilities. It makes it look like
they are doing great, but we can’t know if
they can get out and manage in the
community,” said Bassile, assistant
professor of clinical physical therapy in
Columbia University’s Program in Physical
Therapy.
Therapists use
electromechanical gait-training devices
infrequently in the United States.
“I haven’t come across
any in New York City. We are reading about
them and we are hearing about them, but
mostly they are being used in laboratory
settings for research. They are quite
expensive and it’s mostly just big research
centers that have them on loan from the
manufacturer,” Bassile said.
French B. et al.
Repetitive task training for improving
functional ability after stroke (Review).
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
2007, Issue 4.
Mehrholz J. et al.
Electromechanical-assisted training for
walking after stroke (Review). Cochrane
Database of Systematic Reviews 2007, Issue
4.
The Cochrane
Collaboration is an international
non-profit, independent organization that
produces and disseminates systematic reviews
of health care interventions and promotes
the search for evidence in the form of
clinical trials and other studies of
interventions. Visit
http://www.cochrane.org for more
information.
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