Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
24

Summary

Conditions
  • Gait, Hemiplegic
  • Paresis
  • Stroke
Type
Observational
Design
Observational Model: CohortTime Perspective: Prospective

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 18 years and 90 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

GENERAL: Pre-clinical research has pointed towards a time window of enhanced responsiveness to therapy early after stroke. For example, training has led to substantial recovery if initiated 5 or 14, but not 30 days post-stroke in a rodent model (Biernaski 2004). It is suggested that this early perio...

GENERAL: Pre-clinical research has pointed towards a time window of enhanced responsiveness to therapy early after stroke. For example, training has led to substantial recovery if initiated 5 or 14, but not 30 days post-stroke in a rodent model (Biernaski 2004). It is suggested that this early period is characterized by heightened levels of plasticity and that training can exploit this leading to improved outcome. The typically observed non-linear recovery pattern in stroke survivors (Kwakkel 2004) might suggest that similar mechanisms are induced in the human brain, however clinical research on this is disappointingly sparse. In two closely inter-related phases, we aim to examine the biomechanical changes related to walking recovery in general (Phase I) and the specific effects of robot-assisted training (Phase II). By that, we aim to detect a time window in stroke survivors which resembles the same characteristics as observed in animal models. To initiate gait training at an early stage, when patients usually present severe weakness and balance deficits, a mobile exoskeleton is used which is developed to provide intensive walking practice. OBJECTIVES: (I.a) Is there a distinct time window of behavioral restitution (i.e., returning towards pre-stroke movement patterns) underlying early walking recovery? (I.b) Are improvements in standing and walking throughout the first 6 months post-stroke explained by behavioral restitution or learning to use compensation strategies?

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT03728036
Collaborators
University Hospital, Antwerp
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Jonas Schröder, PhD Student Dept. Rehabilitation Sciences & Physiotherapy, University of Antwerp, Belgium Study Director: Wim Saeys, Prof. Dr. Dept. Rehabilitation Sciences & Physiotherapy, University of Antwerp, Belgium Study Chair: Steven Truijen, Prof. Dr. Dept. Rehabilitation Sciences & Physiotherapy, University of Antwerp, Belgium Study Chair: Gert Kwakkel, Prof. Dr. Dept. Rehabilitation Medicine, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, Netherlands