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Evaluation of Vibration-based Wearable Upper Limb Rehabilitation Device

University of Oklahoma (OU) logo

University of Oklahoma (OU)

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Stroke

Treatments

Device: Vibration Massage Therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

The investigators will perform a pilot 4-week at home study with 48 individuals with stroke and 10 therapists working with stroke patients to examine the feasibility and effect of a wearable focal muscle vibration device on upper limb strength and function.

Full description

Stroke often leads to significant impairment of upper limb function and is associated with decreased quality of life. Patients have difficulty moving out of the upper extremity flexion synergies that often dominate attempts to function after stroke. Change in muscle activation is the key underlying factor. Despite study results from several interventions for muscle activation and motor coordination, wide-scale adoption remains largely elusive due to the lack of sustainability of those interventions. The main reasons for the unsustainability are under-doses of the interventions and low patient compliance and participation. Recent studies among individuals without disabilities as well as those with strokes have shown that with focal vibration, there is greater potential to increase and coordinate muscle recruitment and build muscle strength and endurance. This form of treatment could widely benefit stroke patients and therapists who are in need of sustainable intervention that is effective and efficient to building muscle work capacity for function. Thus, the aims of this study are to evaluate the usability and feasibility of a novel vibration-based wearable device for upper limb rehabilitation in stroke patients. Forty-eight stroke patients and 10 therapists working with those stroke patients will be recruited to evaluate the usability of the device. All stroke patients will participate in a 4-week in-home vibration treatment to evaluate the feasibility of the device. Patients will be randomized into four groups receiving vibrations with different frequency (60 Hz or 120 Hz) and amplitude (0.2mm or 2mm). All groups will follow a prescribed dose of vibration based on the therapists' recommendations. Strength and functional outcomes will be measured before and after the 4-week in-home intervention. The investigators hypothesize that all groups will show an increase in grip strength and upper limb function at the end of study compared to baseline and that the increases in outcomes will be different in different groups. The investigators also expect all participants will tolerate the wearable device without adverse side effects and report high levels of satisfaction with the device. This pilot study may help to develop a novel sustainable wearable system providing vibration-based muscle activation for upper limb function rehabilitation. It may provide patients opportunity to apply the prescribed vibratory stimuli in-home and/or at community settings. It may also allow therapists to monitor treatment usage and patient performance and to adjust the treatment doses based on progression.

Enrollment

4 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke with Chedoke McMaster's Stroke Assessment (CMSA) level four or above;
  • over 18 years of age;
  • have been using a smartphone more than one year;
  • live within 40 miles from the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center (OUHSC)

Exclusion criteria

  • a history of fractures or dislocations in the shoulder, elbow, or wrist from which the participant has not fully recovered,
  • severe impairment of verbal communication ability (for example, severe aphasia),
  • inability to consent (for example, dementia),
  • simultaneous participation in another treatment study targeting stroke recovery

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

4 participants in 4 patient groups

low frequency low amplitude
Experimental group
Description:
The vibration frequency is 60 Hz and amplitude is 0.2 mm
Treatment:
Device: Vibration Massage Therapy
low frequency high amplitude
Experimental group
Description:
The vibration frequency is 60 Hz and amplitude is 2 mm
Treatment:
Device: Vibration Massage Therapy
high frequency low amplitude
Experimental group
Description:
The vibration frequency is 120 Hz and amplitude is 0.2 mm
Treatment:
Device: Vibration Massage Therapy
high frequency high amplitude
Experimental group
Description:
The vibration frequency is 120 Hz and amplitude is 2 mm
Treatment:
Device: Vibration Massage Therapy

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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