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Predicting Ipsilesional Motor Deficits in Stroke With Dynamic Dominance Model

R

Robert L. Sainburg

Status

Completed

Conditions

Stroke

Treatments

Behavioral: Less-Impaired Arm Training
Behavioral: Contralesional Arm Comparison

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT03634397
R01HD059783-06A1 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
STUDY00008385

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study will test the hypothesis that the combination of low-moderate to severe motor deficits in the paretic arm and persistent motor deficits in the less-impaired arm limits functional independence in chronic stroke survivors. We, therefore, predict that intense remediation, focused on improving the speed, coordination, and accuracy of the less-impaired arm should improve functional independence.

Full description

We previously characterized hemisphere-specific motor control deficits in the non-paretic arm of unilaterally lesioned stroke survivors. Our preliminary data indicate these deficits are substantial and functionally limiting in patients with severe paresis. We have specifically designed an intervention to remediate the hemisphere-specific deficits in the less-impaired arm, using a virtual-reality platform, and then follow this training with manipulation training of a variety of real objects, designed to facilitate generalization and transfer to functional behaviors encountered in the natural environment. We propose a 2-site, two-group randomized intervention with a treatment group, which will receive unilateral training of the less-impaired arm, through our Virtual Reality and Manipulation Training (VRMT) protocol. This intervention protocol is grounded in the premise that targeted remediation of fundamental control deficits exhibited by the less-impaired arm will generalize and transfer beyond practiced tasks to performance of activities of daily living (ADL). This approach contrasts with the more pragmatic approach of task-specific training of essential ADL's, which is limited in scope, more cumbersome, and ignores known fundamental motor control deficits. Our control group will receive conventional intervention, guided by recently released practice guidelines for upper limb intervention in adult stroke. The impact of the proposed research is that we address persistent functional performance deficits in chronic stroke patients with severe paresis, who's less-impaired arm impairments are generally ignored in most current rehabilitation protocols. Our first aim addresses the overall effectiveness of this intervention, relative to our control group: To determine whether non-paretic arm VRMT in chronic stroke survivors with severe paresis will produce durable improvements in less-impaired arm motor performance that will generalize to improve functional activities and functional independence to a greater extent than conventional therapy focused on the paretic arm. Our second aim focuses on the mechanistic basis of potential training-related improvements in motor performance: To determine whether intervention-induced improvements in less-impaired arm performance are associated with improvements in hemisphere-specific reaching kinematics. Finally, our third aim monitors for potential negative effects of our experimental intervention on paretic arm impairment.

Enrollment

58 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 85 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. neuroradiological confirmation of unilateral brain damage with residual contralesional upper-extremity weakness
  2. deficits in ipsilesional arm performance assessed by the JTHFT
  3. 6+ months post stroke
  4. Demonstrates cognitive abilities

Exclusion criteria

a history of:

  1. neurological disease other than stroke (e.g., head trauma)
  2. a major psychiatric diagnosis (e.g., schizophrenia, major affective disorder),
  3. hospital admission for substance abuse
  4. peripheral disorders affecting sensation or movement of the upper extremities, including pain or arthritis
  5. currently taking prescription drugs with known sedative properties that are interfering with sensory-motor function
  6. significant joint pain that is activity limiting
  7. bilateral stroke

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

58 participants in 2 patient groups

Less-Impaired Arm Training
Experimental group
Description:
Intervention condition includes therapy of the less-impaired (ipsilesional) arm.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Less-Impaired Arm Training
Contralesional Arm Comparison
Sham Comparator group
Description:
Comparison control condition includes therapy of the paretic (contralesional) arm.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Contralesional Arm Comparison

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Candice Maenza, MS

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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