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Telerehabilitation Early After Stroke

Telerehabilitation Early After Stroke

Recruiting
18 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

The goal of this clinical trial is to assess the safety and feasibility of providing extra doses of rehabilitation therapy for persons with a recent stroke. The therapy treatment targets to improve arm function by introducing telerehabilitation to the bedside of participants during the inpatient rehab admission period. Participants will use a newly developed functional training system (HandyMotion) to access therapy treatment program directly from their hospital room. HandyMotion is a sensor-based training system that can connect to the TV set in the hospital room, enabling patients to access their therapy training program to practice rehab-oriented games and exercises ad libitum, at any time of the day.

Description

This clinical trial is designed to address 3 specific aims:

Aim 1: To measure the safety of daily bedside telerehabilitation.

Aim 2: To measure the feasibility of daily bedside telerehabilitation.

Aim 3: To derive a preliminary estimate of motor and functional outcomes in patients engaged in daily bedside telerehabilitation.

Telerehabilitation therapy is delivered over the course of the inpatient rehabilitation stay. A therapist-facing web portal is used for treatment planning and patient monitoring. The treatment approach was initially designed based on an upper-extremity task-specific training manual and Accelerated Skill Acquisition Program.

Each daily 45-minute treatment session is created by a licensed OT or PT and includes:

  1. At least 15 min/day of upper extremity exercises. In addition, therapists have the option to incorporate standard exercise equipment (e.g., Theraband or dowels) that can be incorporated into assigned exercises.
  2. At least 15 min/day of functional training through games. The study provides 2 controllers with 5 different input devices that are available to drive game play. Games stress various motor control features (e.g., varying movement speed, range of motion, target size, extent of visuomotor tracking, or level of cognitive demand), which are selected and adjusted by the therapist.
  3. Five minutes/day of stroke education. The education content targets five categories (Stroke Risk Factors, Stroke Prevention, Effects of Stroke, Diet, and Exercise) and corresponds to the Stroke Knowledge Exam.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Age 18 years or older
  2. Stroke that is radiologically verified, due to ischemia or to intracerebral hemorrhage, and with time of stroke onset <30 days prior to enrollment; or traumatic brain injury.
  3. Unilateral arm motor deficits that are neither trivial (no arm weakness) or devastating (arm plegia). This requires that the baseline Box & Block Test score with affected arm to be at least 1 block in 60 seconds but no more than 90% of the number of blocks with the good arm.
  4. Possess enough arm movement to participate in therapy
  5. Informed consent signed by the subject
  6. Able to follow simple instructions
  7. Study participation is not likely to be significantly limited by agitated behavior

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. A major, active, coexistent neurological or psychiatric disease that would limit study participation, e.g., advanced dementia
  2. Expectation that patient's cognitive status will likely interfere substantially with playing assigned games or exercises
  3. Deficits in communication that interfere with reasonable study participation
  4. Lacking visual acuity, with or without corrective lens, of 20/50 or better in at least one eye
  5. Subject does not speak sufficient English to comply with study procedures
  6. Shoulder pain that in the judgement of the study team is likely to substantially limit the amount of telerehabilitation therapy completed

Study details
    Cerebral Stroke

NCT05625438

TRCare, Inc.

27 January 2024

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FAQs

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A clinical trial is a study designed to test specific interventions or treatments' effectiveness and safety, paving the way for new, innovative healthcare solutions.

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