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- Title
Dynamic Lycra® orthoses as an adjunct to arm rehabilitation after stroke: a single-blind, two-arm parallel group, randomized controlled feasibility trial.
- Authors
Morris, Jacqui H; John, Alexandra; Wedderburn, Lucy; Rauchhaus, Petra; Donnan, Peter T
- Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to explore the feasibility of conducting a randomized controlled trial of dynamic Lycra® orthoses as an adjunct to arm rehabilitation after stroke and to explore the magnitude and direction of change on arm outcomes. Design: This is a single-blind, two-arm parallel group, feasibility randomized controlled trial. Setting: In-patient rehabilitation. Subjects: The study participants were stroke survivors with arm hemiparesis two to four weeks after stroke receiving in-patient rehabilitation. Interventions: Participants were randomized 2:1 to wear Lycra® gauntlets for eight hours daily for eight weeks, plus usual rehabilitation (n = 27), or to usual rehabilitation only (n = 16). Main measures: Recruitment, retention, fidelity, adverse events and completeness of data collection were examined at 8 and 16 weeks; arm function (activity limitation; Action Research Arm Test, Motor Activity Log) and impairment (Nine-hole Peg Test, Motricity Index, Modified Tardieu Scale). Structured interviews explored acceptability. Results: Of the target of 51, 43 (84%) participants were recruited. Retention at 8 weeks was 32 (79%) and 24 (56%) at 16 weeks. In total, 11 (52%) intervention group participants and 6 (50%) control group participants (odds ratio = 1.3, 95% confidence interval = 0.2 to 7.8) had improved Action Research Arm Test level by 8 weeks; at 16 weeks, this was 8 (61%) intervention and 6 (75.0%) control participants (odds ratio = 1.1, 95% confidence interval = 0.1 to 13.1). Change on other measures favoured control participants. Acceptability was influenced by 26 adverse reactions. Conclusion: Recruitment and retention were low, and adverse reactions were problematic. There were no indications of clinically relevant effects, but the small sample means definitive conclusions cannot be made. A definitive trial is not warranted without orthoses adaptation.
- Subjects
SCOTLAND; ARM physiology; CONFIDENCE intervals; HEMIPLEGIA; INTERVIEWING; ORTHOPEDIC apparatus; RESEARCH methodology; RESEARCH funding; STATISTICAL sampling; STROKE; LOGISTIC regression analysis; PILOT projects; MULTIPLE regression analysis; RANDOMIZED controlled trials; BLIND experiment; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; ODDS ratio; BARTHEL Index; NIH Stroke Scale; DISEASE complications
- Publication
Clinical Rehabilitation, 2019, Vol 33, Issue 8, p1331
- ISSN
0269-2155
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1177/0269215519840403