Virtual-reality Exercises for Alleviating Attention Deficits in Patients With Acquired Brain Injury
Stroke, Attention Disorder
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Stroke focused on measuring stroke, attention, executive functions, virtual reality, neurorehabilitation
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: Time from stroke onset < 1 month Objective pathological performance on at least one standardized test or subtest on attention during standard neuropsychological evaluation Brain injury documented by routine neuroradiological examination (computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging scan) Able to give informed consent as documented by signature Age >= 18 years old Exclusion Criteria: Epilepsy Inability or contraindications to undergo the investigated intervention Major psychiatric co-morbidity Major neurocognitive deficits (e.g. dementia) Incapacity to discriminate colors General cognitive state preventing to understand and perform the tasks Decision to not be informed of incidental findings
Sites / Locations
- University of Lausanne HospitalsRecruiting
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Arm 3
Experimental
Active Comparator
No Intervention
Rehabilitation intervention group
Dose-match control group
Retrospective standard of care group
Each participant of the experimental group will undergo an initial cognitive screening (pre-training) and, in addition to their standard of care, they will have 20 additional sessions with the experimental rehabilitation program. Post-treatment cognitive screening will be completed at the end of the program, then 3-4 and 6-12 months later.
Each participant of the experimental group will undergo an initial cognitive screening (pre-training) and, in addition to their standard of care, they will have 20 additional sessions of neuropsychological standard sessions. Post-treatment cognitive screening will be completed at the end of the program, then 3-4 and 6-12 months later.
Each participant of the retrospective group will be included retrospectively if they were hospitalized in the study's sites between 2012 and 2022, and followed standard neuropsychological rehabilitation of attention.