Arm Rehabilitation Study After Stroke
Status: | Completed |
---|---|
Conditions: | Peripheral Vascular Disease, Neurology |
Therapuetic Areas: | Cardiology / Vascular Diseases, Neurology |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 21 - Any |
Updated: | 3/30/2013 |
Start Date: | June 2009 |
End Date: | January 2014 |
Contact: | Monica A Nelsen, DPT, PT |
Email: | nelsen@usc.edu |
Phone: | (323) 442-1630 |
Interdisciplinary Comprehensive Arm Rehab Evaluation (ICARE) Stroke Initiative
This study is about arm and hand recovery after a stroke. The investigators are testing an
experimental arm therapy called Accelerated Skill Acquisition Program (ASAP) which combines
challenging, intensive and meaningful practice of tasks of the participant's choice compared
to two standard types of therapy (usual and customary arm therapy totaling 30 hours and
usual and customary arm therapy for a duration indicated on the therapy prescription). A
second objective is to characterize current outpatient arm therapy (dosage & content)
following stroke for individuals who are eligible for ICARE. Eligible candidates must have
had a stroke affecting an arm within the last 106 days.
Of the 700,000 individuals who experience a new or recurrent stroke each year, a majority
have considerable residual disability. Sixty-five percent (65%) of patients at 6 months are
unable to incorporate the paretic hand effectively into daily activities. In turn, this
degree of functional deficit contributes to a reduced quality of life after stroke. The
extent of disability has been underplayed by the use of the Barthel Index that captures only
basic activities of daily living such as self-care and does not extend to activities and
participation at higher levels of functioning that are most affected by a residual upper
extremity disability. The past decade has witnessed an explosion of different therapy
interventions designed to capitalize on the brain's inherent capability to rewire and learn
well into old age and more importantly for rehabilitation, after injury. The most effective
arm-focused interventions with the strongest evidence and potentially the most immediate and
cost-effective appeal for the current health-care environment share a common emphasis on
focused task-specific training applied with an intensity higher than usual care. Therefore,
our primary aim is to compare the efficacy of a fully defined, hybrid combination of the
most effective interventions (forced-use/constraint-induced therapy and
skill-based/impairment-mitigating motor learning training), the Accelerated Skill
Acquisition Program (ASAP), to an equivalent dose of usual and customary outpatient therapy.
INCLUSION
Ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke.
Hemiparesis in an upper extremity.
Age 21+.
Able to communicate in English.
Willing to attend outpatient therapy & f/u evaluations for 1 yr.
Some active finger extension.
EXCLUSION
Traumatic or non-vascular brain injury, subarachnoid hemorrhage, AV malformation.
History of psychiatric illness requiring hospitalization within past 24 mos.
Active drug treatment for dementia.
Neurologic condition that may affect motor response (e.g. Parkinson's, ALS, MS).
History of head trauma requiring >48 hours of hospitalization within past 12 mos.
Amputation of all fingers or thumb of hemiparetic (weak) arm.
Treated with Botox in affected arm within last 3 months.
We found this trial at
8
sites
Cedars Sinai Med Ctr Cedars-Sinai is known for providing the highest quality patient care. Our...
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Emory University Emory University, recognized internationally for its outstanding liberal artscolleges, graduate and professional schools,...
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University of Southern California The University of Southern California is one of the world’s leading...
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