Long-Dose Intensive Therapy Is Necessary for Strong, Clinically Significant, Upper Limb Functional Gains and Retained Gains in Severe/Moderate Chronic Stroke.

Journal: Neurorehabilitation and neural repair
Published Date:

Abstract

. Effective treatment methods are needed for moderate/severely impairment chronic stroke. . The questions were the following: (1) Is there need for long-dose therapy or is there a mid-treatment plateau? (2) Are the observed gains from the prior-studied protocol retained after treatment? . Single-blind, stratified/randomized design, with 3 applied technology treatment groups, combined with motor learning, for long-duration treatment (300 hours of treatment). Measures were Arm Motor Ability Test time and coordination-function (AMAT-T, AMAT-F, respectively), acquired pre-/posttreatment and 3-month follow-up (3moF/U); Fugl-Meyer (FM), acquired similarly with addition of mid-treatment. . There was no group difference in treatment response ( ≥ .16), therefore data were combined for remaining analyses (n = 31; except for FM pre/mid/post, n = 36). Pre-to-Mid-treatment and Mid-to-Posttreatment gains of FM were statistically and clinically significant ( < .0001; 4.7 points and < .001; 5.1 points, respectively), indicating no plateau at 150 hours and benefit of second half of treatment. From baseline to 3moF/U: (1) FM gains were twice the clinically significant benchmark, (2) AMAT-F gains were greater than clinically significant benchmark, and (3) there was statistically significant improvement in FM ( < .0001); AMAT-F ( < .0001); AMAT-T ( < .0001). These gains indicate retained clinically and statistically significant gains at 3moFU. From posttreatment to 3moF/U, gains on FM were maintained. There were statistically significant gains in AMAT-F ( = .0379) and AMAT-T = .003.

Authors

  • Janis J Daly
    Stroke Motor Control/Motor Learning Laboratory, Louis Stokes Cleveland Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Cleveland, OH. Electronic address: janis.daly@neurology.ufl.edu.
  • Jessica P McCabe
    3 Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center, Cleveland, OH, USA.
  • John Holcomb
    Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, OH.
  • Michelle Monkiewicz
    Stroke Motor Control/Motor Learning Laboratory, Louis Stokes Cleveland Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Cleveland, OH.
  • Jennifer Gansen
    3 Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center, Cleveland, OH, USA.
  • Svetlana Pundik
    Stroke Motor Control/Motor Learning Laboratory, Louis Stokes Cleveland Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Cleveland, OH.