Assessing Leg Control in People With Chronic Stroke



Status:Recruiting
Conditions:Neurology
Therapuetic Areas:Neurology
Healthy:No
Age Range:18 - 79
Updated:10/13/2018
Start Date:August 5, 2018
End Date:September 2021
Contact:Deborah Diaz, PT,PhD
Email:ddiaz@marybaldwin.edu
Phone:540-887-4087

Use our guide to learn which trials are right for you!

Lower Extremity Selective Voluntary Motor Control in Adults With Chronic Stroke: Comparing the SCALE Assessment to the Fugl-Meyer Assessment

The purpose of this study is to compare the clinometric (psychometric) properties of the
SCALE and FMA-LE assessments in adults after stroke. A second purpose is to determine how
well each measure predicts walking speed using the 10 meter walk test.

Selective voluntary motor control may be important in prognosticating future function in
adults post stroke. It is therefore important to measure selective voluntary motor control
using assessments that are valid, reliable and easy to perform and interpret. Current
assessments are time consuming and complicated. Clinicians who work with patients post stroke
will benefit from this research because they will have evidence supporting appropriate
measurement of selective voluntary motor control. This evidence may inform their clinical
decision making when working with patients. Patients who have survived a stroke will benefit
because their therapists will be able to better measure their selective voluntary motor
control which may one day lead to better prediction of functional outcomes and the selection
of appropriate interventions.

The Fugl-Meyer assessment (FMA) is the "Gold Standard" for the assessment of individuals with
brain injury, most commonly those surviving cerebrovascular accident (stroke). The full
assessment is complicated and can take more than an hour to complete. Clinicians have limited
time to perform a full evaluation of their patients, the FMA is just one part of this
evaluation. The lower extremity selective voluntary motor control component of the FMA
(FMA-LE) is difficult for clinicians who are not experts to perform and interpret. For these
reasons, few practicing clinicians use the FMA. However, measuring selective voluntary motor
control may be important for prognosticating patients' future functional level and their need
for continued therapeutic interventions. The Selective Control Assessment of Lower Extremity
(SCALE) was developed for use with children who have cerebral palsy (CP), a condition that in
some ways presents similar to stroke. The SCALE has been validated and deemed reliable in the
pediatric population with CP. This study aims to determine inter-rater and intra-rater
reliability for the FMA-LE and the SCALE. In addition, scores on the SCALE will be compared
to scores on the FMA-LE to determine concurrent validity. Finally the scores on the SCALE and
FMA-LE will be compared to the time it takes for stroke survivors to walk 10-meters (10-meter
walk test) to determine how well each measure predicts functional status (predictive
validity).

Inclusion Criteria:

- Adults between 18 and 79 years of age who have sustained a chronic cerebrovascular
accident (stroke) with known corticospinal tract damage

- At least one year after onset

- Ability to walk

- Ability to understand and follow simple instructions

- Written informed consent obtained from subject

Exclusion Criteria:

- History of cerebellar infarct, traumatic brain injury, tumor, etc.

- Rigidity, ataxia, or other Cerebellar or Basal Ganglia signs or symptoms.

- Hospitalizations in the past 6 months.

- Neurosurgical or Musculoskeletal surgery in last 12 months.

- Neurological or Musculoskeletal injury within the past month.

- Pain that interferes with the ability to assume side-lying position.

- Medication for hypertonicity: Participants may be on medicine for abnormal tone.

However, there must not be any of the following:

1. Change in dosage or type of medication during the past 6 months

2. Botox injection(s) within 6 months.
We found this trial at
1
site
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455
(612) 625-5000
Phone: 612-624-2364
Univ of Minnesota With a flagship campus in the heart of the Twin Cities, and...
?
mi
from
Minneapolis, MN
Click here to add this to my saved trials