Randomized Controlled Trial: Preliminary Investigation of the Impact of High-Intensity Treadmill Gait Training on Recovery Among Persons with Traumatic Brain Injury.

IF 1.8 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Neurotrauma reports Pub Date : 2025-01-24 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1089/neur.2024.0169
Tyler Shick, Courtney Perkins, Arco Paul, Melissa Martinez, Joseph Joyce, Katy Beach, Jeffrey Swahlan, Justin Weppner
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Abstract

Exercise to treat traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a novel approach that has only become recognized in the past decade. High-intensity gait training (HIGT) has been studied in subjects following stroke; however, little research investigates similar protocols on patients with TBI. The study evaluated HIGT as an intervention for enhancing patient recovery after TBI. Adult subjects (18-65 years) who suffered TBI were randomly allocated to an intervention (HIGT) or control (low-intensity physical therapy) group given three days/week for 1 h over four weeks. Assessments included the 10-m walk test, 6-min walk test, Berg Balance Scale, five-times sit-to-stand (5TSTS), timed up and go (TUG), cognitive TUG, and Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) at day one, two weeks, four weeks, and a four-week follow-up. In addition to a trend toward improved gait speed (p < 0.1) and significantly improved endurance (p < 0.05) in the HIGT group (n = 5), both the control (n = 4) and HIGT groups demonstrated trends toward improved mobility (5TSTS, p < 0.1; TUG, p < 0.1) and significantly improved cognition (cognitive TUG, p < 0.01; MoCA, p < 0.05) over the four-week time period and at the one-month follow-up. HIGT showed longer-lasting rehabilitative effects on gait distance, endurance, mobility, and cognitive function at the four-week follow-up. This study suggests that HIGT may support functional recovery, and future work will involve increasing sample size.

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Randomized Controlled Trial: Preliminary Investigation of the Impact of High-Intensity Treadmill Gait Training on Recovery Among Persons with Traumatic Brain Injury. Patterns of Change in Functional Connectivity and Motor Performance Are Different in Youth Recently Recovered from Concussion. Neuroinflammation at the Gray-White Matter Interface in Active-Duty U.S. Special Operations Forces. Low-Intensity Blast Exposure Induces Multifaceted Long-Lasting Anxiety-Related Behaviors in Mice. Brain Network Alterations in Chronic Spinal Cord Injury: Multilayer Community Detection Approach.
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