Actively Recruiting
Impact of the BOOST GAIT Program on Gait Recovery and Functional Mobility After Stroke
Led by Hasselt University · Updated on 2024-09-25
12
Participants Needed
1
Research Sites
17 weeks
Total Duration
On this page
Sponsors
H
Hasselt University
Lead Sponsor
J
Jessa Hospital
Collaborating Sponsor
AI-Summary
What this Trial Is About
The overarching goal is to determine if the BOOST GAIT program can improve functional mobility in patients with stroke who are undergoing inpatient rehabilitation and have some walking function, through the application of augmented therapeutic exercises designed to achieve a normative gait pattern. The evaluation will be conducted using a combination of clinical scales and objective motion sensors that map walking quality and performance during activities of daily living, such as rising from a chair and standing. It is acknowledged that this single-group pilot study, which aims to include 12 participants, is insufficiently powered to address the primary objective. A larger parallel-design study is required to definitively address this issue. To help design a larger study, the current objectives are: first, to have realistic expectations regarding recruitment and dropout rates; second, to identify potential barriers to therapy adherence and data collection that may impede the success of a larger study; third, assess the test-retest reliability of sensor-based motion capture of movement quality during walking and related tasks in hemiparetic stroke patients. For the latter objective, the sensor measurements at the end of the intervention will be repeated on two consecutive days. In addition to their usual care, participants will undergo additional therapy over a four-week period, with sessions occurring five times per week for one hour as part of the BOOST GAIT program. The BOOST GAIT sessions will be conducted as group-based therapy with four patients and two physiotherapists present to oversee the performance of mobility-specific exercises, including sit-to-stand transfers, standing and stepping, and eventually walking. The rationale for this approach is that the combined effects of augmenting the amount of therapeutic exercises and specifically targeting motor control of the paretic leg will facilitate symmetry during tasks, which in turn will have carry-over effects on safe performance of walking and other mobility tasks.
CONDITIONS
Official Title
Impact of the BOOST GAIT Program on Gait Recovery and Functional Mobility After Stroke
Who Can Participate
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if you...
- A first-ever unilateral stroke, infarction or bleeding
- Undergoing inpatient rehabilitation in the Jessa hospital, Herk-de-Stad
- Less than 3 months after stroke onset at the moment of inclusion
- 18 years of older
- Berg Balance Scale score 24 or higher (out of 56) at moment of inclusion
- Timed Up-and-Go score 14 s or higher at moment of inclusion
- Functional Ambulation Category 3 or higher at moment of inclusion
- Understanding the goals and procedures of this study and giving informed consent
You will not qualify if you...
- Significant cognitive and/or speech impairments that markedly affect the comprehension and execution of instructions
AI-Screening
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Trial Site Locations
Total: 1 location
1
FRAME by Jessa Ziekenhuis
Herk-de-Stad, Limburg, Belgium, 3540
Actively Recruiting
Research Team
J
Jonas Schröder, Hasselt University, PhD
CONTACT
S
Sarah Meyer, Jessa Hospital, PhD
CONTACT
How is the study designed?
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Masking
NONE
Allocation
NA
Model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary Purpose
TREATMENT
Number of Arms
1
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