Improving orientation with respect to gravity enhances balance and gait recovery after stroke: DOBRAS cohort

IF 3.9 3区 医学 Q1 REHABILITATION Annals of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine Pub Date : 2024-01-23 DOI:10.1016/j.rehab.2023.101767
Shenhao Dai , Céline Piscicelli , Adélaide Marquer , Rémi Lafitte , Emmanuelle Clarac , Olivier Detante , Dominic Pérennou
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Abstract

Background

Lateropulsion is a deficit in body orientation with respect to gravity, frequent after stroke. Although it is a primary factor affecting mobility, the impact of its attenuation on balance and gait recovery has never been investigated. Moreover, most studies on the lateropulsion time-course focus on severe forms suspected to have a poor recovery, which is not proven.

Objectives

To investigate lateropulsion attenuation and test 2 hypotheses: 1) lateropulsion attenuation greatly contributes to balance and gait recovery and 2) severe forms of lateropulsion recover slower than moderate forms.

Methods

This longitudinal study involved individuals included in the Determinants of Balance Recovery After Stroke (DOBRAS) cohort, after a first-ever hemispheric stroke, with data collected on day 30 (D30), D60 and D90 post-stroke. Body orientation with respect to gravity was assessed using the Scale for Contraversive Pushing (both scores and severity grouping), in parallel with balance (Postural Assessment Scale for Stroke) and gait (modified Fugl-Meyer Gait Assessment).

Results

Among the 106 eligible individuals (mean age 66.5 [SD 9.7] years), on D30, 43 (41%) were considered upright and 63 (59%) showed lateropulsion: 30 (28%) moderate and 33 (31%) severe. Most individuals with lateropulsion (73%) improved their body orientation, progressing from severe to moderate lateropulsion, or becoming upright. However, half were still not upright on D90. The improvement in body orientation had a large impact on mobility, especially in individuals with severe lateropulsion, in whom it explained about 50% of balance and gait recovery between D30 and D60, then 20% (D60-D90). For moderate lateropulsion, its attenuation explained about 20% of balance and gait recovery until D90. Lateropulsion attenuation was not slower in individuals with severe forms.

Conclusions

Lateropulsion attenuation enhances balance and gait recovery in individuals after stroke suggesting that specific rehabilitation of body orientation with respect to gravity might help to recover mobility.

Registration

NCT03203109

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改善重力定向可促进中风后的平衡和步态恢复:DOBRAS队列。
背景:后定向力是一种身体相对于重力的定向缺陷,在中风后经常出现。虽然它是影响行动能力的一个主要因素,但其衰减对平衡和步态恢复的影响却从未被研究过。此外,大多数关于后推力时间过程的研究都集中在严重的后推力上,怀疑其恢复能力较差,但这并没有得到证实:研究侧推力衰减并验证两个假设:1) 后推力衰减对平衡和步态的恢复有很大帮助;2) 重度后推力的恢复速度慢于中度后推力:这项纵向研究的对象是中风后平衡恢复的决定因素(Determinants of Balance Recovery After Stroke,DOBRAS)队列中的患者,他们都是首次发生半球中风,研究人员在中风后第 30 天(D30)、D60 天和 D90 天收集了数据。在评估身体平衡(脑卒中姿势评估量表)和步态(改良版 Fugl-Meyer 步态评估)的同时,还使用了逆向推力量表(包括分数和严重程度分组)来评估身体相对于重力的方向:在 106 名符合条件的患者(平均年龄 66.5 [SD 9.7] 岁)中,43 人(41%)在 D30 时被认为是直立的,63 人(59%)表现为后推,其中 30 人(28%)为中度后推,33 人(31%)为重度后推。大多数患者(73%)的身体方位有所改善,从重度后倾转为中度后倾,或变得直立。然而,半数患者在 D90 时仍无法直立。身体定向能力的改善对行动能力有很大影响,尤其是对重度后展患者,在D30至D60期间,身体定向能力约占平衡和步态恢复的50%,然后是20%(D60至D90)。对于中度后展,其衰减可解释约 20% 的平衡和步态恢复,直至 D90。在重度患者中,后推力衰减的速度并不慢:结论:后推力衰减增强了中风后患者的平衡和步态恢复,这表明身体相对于重力的特定定向康复可能有助于恢复行动能力:NCT03203109。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
4.30%
发文量
136
审稿时长
34 days
期刊介绍: Annals of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine covers all areas of Rehabilitation and Physical Medicine; such as: methods of evaluation of motor, sensory, cognitive and visceral impairments; acute and chronic musculoskeletal disorders and pain; disabilities in adult and children ; processes of rehabilitation in orthopaedic, rhumatological, neurological, cardiovascular, pulmonary and urological diseases.
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