Complex Exercise Program for Stroke Patients
StrokeSports Physical Therapy2 moreThe physical and social effects of exercise programs and daily exercise have already been demonstrated in stroke. However, stroke survivors have shown a passive attitude towards the exercise program and there was little guideline and experience of the stroke exercise program in the community. Therefore, the study provides patients with an adequate guide to a complex exercise program after discharge based on the medical records.
Assistive Soft Robotic Glove (EsoGLOVE) Intervention for Stroke Patients
StrokeThis proposed research aims to assess the efficacy and feasibility of the EsoGLOVE with Trigno Biofeedback (EMG sensors) in the inpatient rehabilitation setting. 1. Understanding the ability of the EsoGLOVE with Trigno Biofeedback (EMG sensors) in providing CPM exercise and assisting stroke patients with completing hand functional tasks, eventually improves patients' motor function and neural recovery.2. To generate evidence on this innovative device and further deploy it in clinical practice. A Health Technology Assessment (HTA) will be generated from this study to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of the intervention.
Goal-setting in Stroke: From Guideline Towards Implementation: a Realist Evaluation
StrokeOverall objective: The aim of the project is to integrate the quality improvement programme on goal setting into the current care of people with stroke and to test and refine this programme. Target group: People after a stroke (treatment in the participating centres); total number 155 people Informal carers (only if the person has had a stroke and has limited opportunities to participate) Professional carer; total number 155 people What? The goal-setting programme becomes standard care, it is checked whether the programme has been applied in care by health professionals (review of the patient's medical record), what the effects are on patients (questionnaires) and health professionals (questionnaires) and whether the quality improvement programme needs to be adjusted or refined (interviews with health professionals and the patient group) When to evaluate? Health professionals: start of the study and end of the study via questionnaires. Interviews/focus group (every 3 months) Review of patient records and observations (every 3 weeks) Patient assessment: Admission and 1 week before discharge or end of study, Interviews/focus group (3 months)
Links Between Motor Abilities and Language Ability Deficits in Patients With Post-stroke Aphasia...
StrokeAphasiaAphasia is a language disorder that affects oral and written expression and/or comprehension. It's one of the most disabling consequence of stroke. Nowadays, aphasia rehabilitation is supported by speech therapists and is based on oral and written language, comprehension and expression. However recent studies have shown links between language and motor function (especially tool use). Two domains that share neural substrates (Broca's area, basal ganglia) and that can influence each other. The aim of this study is to show that a motor training with a tool (pliers) can improve short-term and long-term language abilities of aphasic patients who had a stroke at least 3 months ago. The investigators hypothesis is that there is a learning transfer between tool use and language abilities in aphasic patients with an inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) lesion caused by a stroke, thanks to their shared neural resources. Investigators aim to study long and short-time effects of this tool motor training with three experiments: E1 will study short-term effects by estimating pre-post effect of a motor training on language abilities. Investigators will experiment different effectors: tool, hand, none (control group); on patients and healthy volunteers. E2 will study long-term effects with multiple single-case experimental designs (SCED). Patients will undergo four weeks of on-off design. E3 will study long-term effects by estimating the efficiency of an experimental sensorimotor protocol of four weeks, comparing a group of patients with the experimental sensorimotor protocol to a control group of patients
Construction and Effect Evaluation of Integrated Care Model for Pulmonary Infection in Stroke Patients...
StrokePulmonary InfectionTo understand the occurrence of pulmonary infection in stroke patients with tracheotomy, and to clarify the current situation of clinical nursing. Construct a standardized, systematic and scientific integrated care model to control the severity of pulmonary infection in non-acute stroke patients with simple tracheotomy. To evaluate the clinical application effect of integrated care model of pulmonary infection in stroke patients with tracheotomy.
Oculomotor and Cognitive Rehabilitation Using Visual Feedback in Stroke Patients
StrokeOculomotor; Disorder1 moreInvestigators will test the effectiveness of oculomotor cognitive training using eye tracker-based device during rehabilitation course in patients with a degree of disability no more than 3 points on a scale Rankin.
Improving Measurement and Treatment of Post-stroke Neglect
StrokeThis study examines how to best assess and treat post-stroke neglect. This study will examine the preliminary effects of an innovative intervention (repetitive task-specific practice + transcranial direct current stimulation) for individuals with neglect. This study will also determine whether items from various neglect assessments can be combined to establish a more comprehensive neglect measure.
REMOTE Ischemic Perconditioning Among Acute Ischemic Stroke Patients ( REMOTE-CAT)
Ischemic StrokeStroke is one of the leading causes of death worldwide and the main cause of incapacity. Currently, the only therapies for acute ischemic stroke (AIS) patients are the administration of recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rt-PA) and/or endovascular treatment. Unfortunately, many patients cannot benefit from these therapies due to contraindications or evolution time. Neuroprotective therapies could not only increase the benefits of available reperfusion therapies but also provide an option for patients who are not candidates for these treatments. Remote ischemic conditioning, consisting on brief episodes of transient limb ischemia, represents a new paradigm in neuroprotection. It can be categorized in pre-, per- or postconditioning, depending on the moment of application. According to studies in coronary ischemia, remote ischemic perconditioning (RIPerC) during the ischemic event is safe, cost-effective, feasible and associated with a reduction in myocardial injury. The investigators aim to conduct a multicentre study (5 university hospitals) of pre-hospital RIPerC in AIS patients (within 8 hours of stroke onset), which would include 572 stroke code activated patients (286 would undergo RIPerC and 286 would be sham). Our hypothesis is that RIPerC would be safe and would induce endogenous neuroprotective phenomena associated with good outcomes in AIS patients whether treated with revascularization therapies or not. Moreover, the development of systemic ischemic tolerance should provide metabolomic and lipidomic signatures that would present an opportunity to find specific molecular markers (biomarkers). The main objectives will be to assess: 1) RIPerC clinical benefits in AIS, 2) whether RIPerC is safe not only in AIS but also in all cases of stroke code activation, 3) whether RIPerC is associated with a reduction in cerebral infarct size and 4) metabolomic and lipidomic signatures of the RIPerC effect.
Effectiveness of Computerized Device New of Visual Motor Simulation Versus Mirror Therapy in Hemiplegic...
StrokeMirror Therapy (TM) has been shown to be effective in motor rehabilitation of the hemiplegic upper limb, but its implementation in current clinical practice has several difficulties, both from the patient and physiotherapist point of view. A new computerized Mirror Therapy (TM) device (Intensive Visual Simulation 3 (IVS3), Dessintey) which aims to solve the TM compliance problems and make it more efficient have been developed.
Thrombectomy In TANdem Occlusion
Carotid Artery DiseasesThrombectomy2 moreTandem occlusion is defined by an acute ischemic stroke (AIS) with concomitant steno-occlusive disease of the extra cranial carotid artery and concerned about 10% of AIS patients. Whereas endovascular treatment has shown its efficiency in AIS by large vessel occlusion (LVO), to date, there is no consensus on the endovascular management of the extra cranial carotid artery in tandem occlusion. Only few of them were included in previous randomized trials who evaluated mechanical thrombectomy and were often listed in the non-inclusion criteria. Therapeutic management of this population was not specifically addressed in recent trials. Endovascular management can be complex with the need of acute stenting of the extra cranial carotid lesion along with the potential need of antithrombotic therapy initiation, the benefit and the safety of stenting of the cervical lesion in acute phase of AIS have shown encouraging results but however remains to be assessed. The TITAN (Thrombectomy In TANdem lesion) trial aims to demonstrate the superiority of the combined use of intracranial thrombectomy and extracranial carotid stenting compared to intracranial thrombectomy alone on the complete reperfusion rate in patients with acute ischemic stroke due to tandem lesion.