Replacing canes with an elasticated orthotic-garment in chronic stroke patients – The influence on gait and balance. A series of N-of-1 trials

Maguire, Clare C.; Sieben, Judith M.; Lutz, Nathanael; van der Wijden, Gisela; Scheidhauer, Heike; de Bie, RobertA. (2020). Replacing canes with an elasticated orthotic-garment in chronic stroke patients – The influence on gait and balance. A series of N-of-1 trials Journal of Bodywork and Movement Therapies, 24(4), pp. 203-214. ELSEVIER 10.1016/j.jbmt.2020.06.006

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Objective:To investigate the effect of replacing canes with an elasticated orthotic-garment on balanceand gait-function in chronic stroke survivors.Design:Experimental, N-of-1 series with a replicated, ABC design with randomised phase duration in ahome setting.Participants:Four cane using chronic stroke survivors (P1-4).Interventions:Phase A (9e12 weeks) cane-walking“as usual”to establish baseline values; Phase B (9e16weeks) intervention: orthotic-garment worn throughout the day with maximal cane-use reduction;Phase C (9e10 weeks) participant-determined follow-up: either no walking-aid, orthotic-garment orcane.Outcome measures:Primary: Functional-Gait-Assessment (FGA), Secondary: Trunk-sway during walkingmeasured as Total-Angle-Area (TAA�2) in frontal and sagittal-planes, both measured weekly.Results:Visual and statistical analysis of results showed significant improvements in FGA from phase Ato B in all participants. Improvement continued in phase C in P2, stabilized in P1 and P4 and deterioratedin P3. A Minimal-Clinical-Important-Difference of 6 points-change was achieved in P2&P4. Trunk-swayreduced during walking, indicating increased stability, in two participants from phase A to B and in threeparticipants from A to C but no TAA changes were statistically significant. In phase C participant-selectedwalking-aids were: P1 cane-usage reduced by 25%, P2 independent-walking with no assistive-device, S3usual cane-usage, P4 orthotic-garment with reduced cane-usage 2-3 days-a-week, usual cane-usage 4e5days.Conclusions:Although walking ability is multifactorial these results indicate that the choice of walking-aids can have a specific and clinically relevant impact on gait following stroke.“Hands-free”assistive-devices may be more effective than canes in improving gait-function in somepatients.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

School of Health Professions > Physiotherapy

Name:

Maguire, Clare C.;
Sieben, Judith M.;
Lutz, Nathanael0000-0002-7512-7060;
van der Wijden, Gisela;
Scheidhauer, Heike and
de Bie, RobertA.

Subjects:

R Medicine > R Medicine (General)

ISSN:

1360-8592

Publisher:

ELSEVIER

Language:

English

Submitter:

Nathanael Lutz

Date Deposited:

15 Jun 2021 14:33

Last Modified:

10 May 2022 21:45

Publisher DOI:

10.1016/j.jbmt.2020.06.006

ARBOR DOI:

10.24451/arbor.14909

URI:

https://arbor.bfh.ch/id/eprint/14909

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