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Assessing the Reliability and Validity of 4-meter and 10-meter Walking Test

U

Universitat Internacional de Catalunya

Status

Completed

Conditions

Cerebral Infarction
Stroke
Gait, Hemiplegic
Cerebrovascular Disorders

Treatments

Other: Assessment

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04919772
4-meter walking test

Details and patient eligibility

About

The 4-meter walk test and 10-meter walk test is currently applied to assess gait speed.These tools are frequently used in clinical trials and were also shown to be reliable measurement methods. There are ocassions where it is not possible to have a long corridor to measure gait speed. It is necessary to have a tool to evaluate gait speed in a small space as 4-meter walk test.

Full description

Walking speed is an important aspect of gait and is commonly used as an objective measure of functional mobility in both clinical and research settings. The majority who have suffered a stroke tend to have gait disturbances. Regaining locomotor ability is one of the primary goals in stroke rehabilitation, and it is most commonly measured using changes in self-selected walking speed. Although many of them can walk independently, they do not do so with enough speed and endurance to allow them to perform their activities of daily living prior to stroke. Not only is self-selected walking speed simple, cost effective, reliable, valid, sensitive, and specific, but it is also highly related to the severity of impairment and predicts functional walking status. It is recommended as a "vital sign" of health. Improvements in walking speed of 0.1 m/s or more have been shown to be a predictor of good health. However, decreased walking speed has been related to worse health outcomes and frailty in older people.

The 4-meter walk test (4 MWT) and 10-meter walk test (10 MWT) is currently applied using various timing protocols and distance covered that may affect data interpretation with a standard value, and comparisons among the studies. There are two protocols to measure walking speed, static and flying start. A static start (i.e., record the time used to cover a total walkway or from the start to stop walking) or a flying start (i.e., measured the time while walking in the middle of the walkway).

The aim of this study is to investigate the test-retest reliability of the 4 MWT and 10 MWT and their correlation with 5-repetition sit-to-stand in chronic stroke survivors.

Enrollment

20 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • All study participants are clinically diagnosed with stroke
  • Adult participants, defined as >18 years of age
  • Have preserved cognitive ability: Achieve a score equal to or greater than 25 points on the Montreal Cognitive Assessment test.
  • Have the ability to walk on a flat surface of at least 20 meters, with or without aid.

Exclusion criteria

  • A history of lower extremities injury or surgery
  • A history of botulinum injection within 3 months
  • A history of inflammatory arthritis
  • A history of inflammatory myopathy or peripheral nervous disease
  • A history of other neurological disease as a Parkinson, spinal cord etc.

Trial design

20 participants in 1 patient group

Stroke survivors
Description:
Chronic stroke, generally speaking chronic stroke refers to the period of recovery that takes place at least six months after the initial stroke event
Treatment:
Other: Assessment

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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