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Visual Observation Scale for the Upper Limb During Walking in Patients After Stroke.

G

Ghent University Hospital (UZ)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Upper Extremity Paresis
Stroke
Gait, Hemiplegic

Treatments

Other: Visual observation of arm swing during walking

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05128370
BC-10309

Details and patient eligibility

About

For several years now, it has been demonstrated that the upper limb plays an important role in the function of an efficient and balanced gait pattern in healthy adults. After a stroke, the reduced muscle strength has a clear influence on the gait pattern, but also on the active movement possibilities of the upper limb. However, the role of the upper limb during gait is not sufficiently explored in the literature. The gold standard for motion analysis is a 3D analysis performed with infrared cameras capturing reflective markers during gait. Unfortunately, it is not possible for all people after a stroke to undergo this examination. On the one hand, patients must already have a certain degree of independence with regard to gait. On the other hand, not all centers have access to this expensive accommodation. There are some validated observation scales for people after stroke to describe the gait based on a 2D video image. This method is much more accessible and can be applied by any therapist. However, to date there has been little attention paid to the upper limb in these observation scales. Therefore, analogous to the observation scales for gait, an observation scale for the upper limb during gait was set up. The use of this scale can add value to the rehabilitation of people after a stroke.

  • The treatment team will receive information about the patient's complete movement pattern.
  • The arm will be more prominent when setting rehabilitation goals related to gait. This can lead to a positive effect on the gait pattern itself, but also to more attention being paid to the arm, which has a more difficult recovery than the leg after a stroke.

The aim of the current study will be

  • to determine the inter and intra tester reliability of this visual observation scale
  • to investigate if the results of the visual observation scale correlate to a 3D assessment performed in a subgroup of participants

Full description

Patients will be walking for 4x10 m. During this walking a 2D video recording in the frontal (back and front view) and sagittal plane (left and right sided view) will be performed.

Supervision of therapist during walking is allowed. Therapist cannot help the patient during walking.

This images will be used to score the visual observation scale (G.A.I.T) and the additional observation scale developed for this study.

In a subgroup of participants from the Ghent University Hospital, a 3D assessment will be made on an instrumented treadmill (GRAIL, Motek), which will be used as a golden standard to compare with.

Additional clinical parameters will be investigated to describe the study group.

Enrollment

25 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 70 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • All stroke patients who are able to walk with or without the use of a unilateral walking device (stick, tripod) for at least 10 m.
  • Normal ambulation prior to stroke.
  • Unilateral stroke.

Exclusion criteria

  • Other neurologic conditions.
  • Orthopedic conditions that influence gait.
  • Visual impairments that impede independent walking.
  • Cerebellar stroke

Trial design

25 participants in 1 patient group

Stroke group
Description:
Stroke patients who can walk independently for at least 10 meters without rest. Unilateral walking aids are allowed.
Treatment:
Other: Visual observation of arm swing during walking

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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