The effectiveness of a novel cable-driven gait trainer (Robowalk) combined with conventional physiotherapy compared to conventional physiotherapy alone following stroke: a randomised controlled trial.

Journal: International journal of rehabilitation research. Internationale Zeitschrift fur Rehabilitationsforschung. Revue internationale de recherches de readaptation
Published Date:

Abstract

There is increasing interest in gait training devices to improve walking ability in people following stroke. This randomised controlled trial aimed to compare the effectiveness of the Robowalk, a novel cable-driven gait trainer combined with conventional physiotherapy to conventional physiotherapy alone in improving walking speed, endurance, balance, functional outcomes, and quality of life in people following stroke. Rehabilitation inpatients within 3 months following stroke (n = 40) were randomised to standard care with conventional physiotherapy ('control,' n = 20) and cable-driven gait trainer combined with conventional physiotherapy ('intervention,' n = 20). All participants received 1 hour of physiotherapy a day, 5 days a week. The control group received conventional physiotherapy only; the intervention group received a combination of 30 minutes of conventional physiotherapy and 30 minutes of cable-driven gait trainer consecutively. Outcome measures were 10-metre walk test (primary outcome), 6-minute walk test, timed up and go, step test, Functional Independence Measure, and EuroQol five-dimension scale. Evaluation timepoints were on admission (T0), discharge (T1), and 4 weeks post discharge (T2). There were no differences between groups at T0, T1, and T2 in all outcome measures although there was a trend towards a larger and more sustained improvement in 10-metre walk test in favour of the intervention group and in Functional Independence Measure motor and self-care in favour of the control group, both at T2. The combination of cable-driven gait trainer with conventional physiotherapy appears as effective as conventional physiotherapy alone in improving gait outcomes in people following a recent stroke. Further studies are required to confirm these findings and determine optimal dosing regimens and long-term outcomes.

Authors

  • Robert Stolz
    Department of Rehabilitation Medicine.
  • Rohini Nayyar
    Department of Physiotherapy, Royal Melbourne Hospital.
  • Julie Louie
    Department of Physiotherapy, Royal Melbourne Hospital.
  • Kelly J Bower
    Department of Physiotherapy, Royal Melbourne Hospital.
  • Sanjoy K Paul
    Melbourne EpiCentre, University of Melbourne & Melbourne Health, Melbourne, Australia.
  • Louisa Ng
    Department of Rehabilitation Medicine.