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Cognitive Multi-sensory Rehabilitation on Upper Limb Function and Fatigue in Stroke

Cognitive Multi-sensory Rehabilitation on Upper Limb Function and Fatigue in Stroke

Recruiting
45-65 years
Male
Phase N/A

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Overview

This interventional study aims to investigate the therapeutic efficacy of Cognitive multi-sensory rehabilitation (CMR) on upper limb function and fatigue in chronic stroke patients. The main question is:

• Does cognitive multi-sensory rehabilitation significantly affect upper limb function and fatigue in stroke patients? Participants will be assigned into two groups. They will receive 12 sessions of study group CMR and traditional physical therapy and control group traditional physical Therapy rehabilitation. CMR 40 minutes immediately followed by 20 minutes of selected physical therapy program, three sessions per week for four weeks.

Description

About 70% of people with stroke are unable to use their affected hand efficiently in activities of daily living. Further, post-stroke fatigue affects up to 92% of post-stroke patients. Post-stroke fatigue is a multifaceted motor and cognitive process, in which the patient experiences tiredness and lack of energy that develops during physical or mental activity which may persist for years. Post-stroke fatigue impacts the mental/physical functions of the patient through decreased energy, and thus, is a significant barrier to recovery.

Preliminary evidence indicates sensory rehabilitation may enhance motor recovery in people with stroke. Cognitive Multisensory Rehabilitation (CMR) is a therapist-guided sensorimotor rehabilitation approach, that targets the patients' ability to solve sensory discrimination exercises, where the patient compares the sensations felt by the hand to the shapes observed with the eyes. Cognitive processes are encouraged by asking the patient to determine the limb movement or its position, how the movement was felt in the body, how the limb moved in relation to other parts of the body, and to spatial parameters in the environment. Because CMR integrates cognitive processes with sensory and motor tasks, it may be a novel method to address post-stroke fatigue, and it may increase connectivity in sensory and motor areas of the brain.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Age between 45 and 65 years.
  • 6-18 months after ischemic stroke
  • living in the community (i.e., not in a long-term care home).
  • medically stable.
  • normal score in the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA: 25 to 30, maximum score = 30).
  • Spasticity of upper limb muscles ranged from (grade 1:2) according to the Modified Ashworth scale.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • severe spasticity (Modified Ashworth Scale score of 4)
  • any medical condition that hinders full participation,
  • another neurological diagnosis beyond stroke including cognitive impairment, or
  • upper extremity pain > 4/10 on the Numeric Pain Rating Scale (maximum 10/10).

Study details
    Stroke
    Ischemic

NCT06251661

Cairo University

18 February 2024

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