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Promoting Recovery Optimization With WALKing Exercise After Stroke (PROWALKS)

University of Delaware logo

University of Delaware

Status

Completed

Conditions

Stroke

Treatments

Behavioral: SAM alone
Behavioral: FAST alone
Behavioral: FAST+SAM

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02835313
NIH 1R01HD086362-01A1

Details and patient eligibility

About

Stroke survivors, as a group, are extremely inactive and this has serious consequences for them, including an increased risk of a second stroke and developing other diseases. This study investigates a novel intervention designed to improve everyday activity after stroke by combining walking training to improve walking capacity with a program to encourage more daily walking.

Full description

As a group, stroke survivors are more physically inactive than even the most sedentary older adults. Lack of physical activity has serious consequences in persons with stroke, including an increased risk of recurrent stroke, developing other diseases and mortality. Current rehabilitation interventions do little to improve real-world walking activity after stroke, suggesting that simply improving walking capacity is not sufficient for improving daily physical activity after stroke. Rather, the investigator's hypothesize that the combination of a fast walking intervention that improves walking capacity, with a step activity monitoring program that facilitates translation of gains from the clinic to the "real-world", would generate greater improvements in real world walking activity than with either intervention alone. Data from the investigator's lab provides support for this hypothesis; however, it suggests that the greater efficacy of combining the 2 interventions depends on a participant's initial walking activity. Thus, the investigator's do not expect that one intervention will be superior to the others for all participants, but rather that the combined intervention will be superior for those with low levels of baseline walking activity, speed and endurance. The specific objective of this study is to test whether and for whom combining fast walking training with a step activity monitoring program (FAST+SAM) is superior in improving real-world walking activity compared to fast walking training alone (FAST) or a step activity monitoring and feedback program alone (SAM) in those with chronic stroke. Using a randomized controlled experimental design, 225 chronic (> 6 months) stroke survivors, will complete 12 weeks of fast walking training (FAST), a step activity monitoring program (SAM) or a fast walking training + step activity monitoring program (FAST+SAM). Moderation of specific intervention outcomes by baseline characteristics will be evaluated to determine for whom the interventions are effective.

Enrollment

250 patients

Sex

All

Ages

21 to 85 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Age 21-85
  2. Chronic stroke (>6 months post stroke)
  3. Able to walk at self-selected speed without assistance from another person (assistive devices are allowed)
  4. Self-selected walking speed >0.3 m/s and <1.0 m/s
  5. Average steps/day <8,000
  6. Resting heart rate between 40-100 beats per minute
  7. Resting blood pressure between 90/60 to 170/90.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Evidence of cerebellar stroke
  2. Other potentially disabling neurologic conditions in addition to stroke
  3. Lower limb Botulinum toxin injection <4 months earlier
  4. Current participation in physical therapy
  5. Inability to walk outside the home prior to the stroke
  6. Coronary artery bypass graft, stent placement or myocardial infarction within past 3 months
  7. Musculoskeletal pain that limits activity
  8. Inability to communicate with investigators
  9. score >1 on question 1b and >0 on question 1c on the NIH Stroke Scale.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Factorial Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

250 participants in 3 patient groups

FAST+SAM
Experimental group
Description:
Subjects participate in fast walking training in combination with a step activity monitoring program
Treatment:
Behavioral: FAST+SAM
FAST alone
Active Comparator group
Description:
Subjects participate in fast walking training
Treatment:
Behavioral: FAST alone
SAM alone
Active Comparator group
Description:
Subjects participate in a step activity monitoring program
Treatment:
Behavioral: SAM alone

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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