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"Core Stability" Exercises to Improve Sitting Balance in Stroke Patients (Fisionet)

R

Rosa Cabanas Valdés

Status

Completed

Conditions

Cerebrovascular Accident
Stroke
Cerebral Stroke

Treatments

Other: Standard Physiotherapy Exercises
Other: Core stability

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01864382
UIC-FIS-2012-04

Details and patient eligibility

About

The stroke as cerebrovascular disease is the leading cause of permanent neurological disability and the third death in the Western world. Their affected often have motor and sensory disturbances in the form of hemiparesis with a possible influence on the balance be altered trunk muscles, important components of postural control. The treatment of stroke, covers a wide range of different strategies and approaches physiotherapy, including, specific exercises on the trunk called "core stability", performed by the patient with the help and supervision of a physiotherapist specializing in neurology, that are based on coordination, motor and proprioceptive work, especially the lumbar-pelvic. The effectiveness of these last years has been demonstrated empirically, but until now there is no sufficient evidence of the effects of these exercises on sitting balance in respect, and standing up in the subacute phase post-stroke patients. To prove the evidence raises a randomized, multicenter, blinded and where the evaluator will not participate in the analysis and processing is done by intention to treat. Patients will be divided into two groups: control (usual physiotherapy center made ) and experimental (made also 15 minutes workout "core stability"). The intervention will have a frequency of 5 days a week for 5 weeks and up to 12 weeks. The expected effect is that the experimental group patients develop better postural control at the trunk and this influences the balance in sitting, standing and walking.

Full description

The deterioration in the balance sitting and poor sitting ability, clinical problems are common after stroke. These patients show a significant decrease in the performance level of the trunk, compared to healthy individuals of the same age and sex and present asymmetry of the trunk and pelvis.

Sitting involves the ability to achieve a variety of objects that are in and out of arm's length, as personal daily activities, showering, going to the bathroom and dressing. These arm movements, triggering postural adjustments in the muscles of the trunk and lower extremities, which anticipated the movement always precede the active movement. This anticipative control can be altered in subjects with stroke.

The trunk seems particularly important for balance, as stabilizes the pelvis and spine. Dean et al, (1997; 2007) and Ibrahimi (2010) showed a beneficial effect on functional scope of practice tasks, sitting in variables dynamic sitting balance, load weight of the affected side and standing. Also in the studies of Howe (2005); Verheyden (2009); Saeys (2011);Karthikbabu (2011) and Kumar (2011) with specific exercises for the trunk, favorable outcomes were obtained compared with standard treatment. However, these studies with few patients and without any monitoring, it needs to be confirmed (what is this study intended)

Enrollment

80 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Adults of either sex
  • > 18 years with a diagnosis of stroke, ischemic or hemorrhagic origin <3 months of evolution
  • Orthopedic problems not present to keep sitting. Ability to understand instructions
  • The Index Barthel ˂ 70 points and Trunk Impairment Scale ˂ 16 points.

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients with cognitive problems, Mini mental state examination ˂ 24
  • Patients with a second stroke confirmed by Neurology services or previous motor disability that altered the balance, or a Rankin value not superior to 3
  • The patients with stroke hemorrhagic origin with surgical treatment.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

80 participants in 2 patient groups

Standard Physiotherapy Exercises
Other group
Description:
Standard Physiotherapy Exercises 5 days a week during 5 weeks
Treatment:
Other: Standard Physiotherapy Exercises
Core stability
Experimental group
Description:
Core stability.5 days a week during 5 weeks
Treatment:
Other: Core stability
Other: Standard Physiotherapy Exercises

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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