Wrong question. What are the protocols that will prevent falls in chronic stroke survivors?
Does severity of motor impairment affect reactive adaptation and fall-risk in chronic stroke survivors?
- Tanvi BhattEmail author,
- Shamali Dusane and
- Prakruti Patel
Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation201916:43
© The Author(s). 2019
- Received: 27 August 2018
- Accepted: 4 March 2019
- Published: 22 March 2019
Abstract
Background
A single-session of
slip-perturbation training has shown to induce long-term fall risk
reduction in older adults. Considering the spectrum of motor impairments
and deficits in reactive balance after a cortical stroke, we aimed to
determine if chronic stroke survivors could acquire and retain reactive
adaptations to large slip-like perturbations and if these adaptations
were dependent on severity of motor impairment.
Methods
Twenty-six chronic stroke
participants were categorized into high and low-functioning groups based
on their Chedoke-McMaster-Assessment scores. All participants received a
pre-training, slip-like stance perturbation at level-III (highest
intensity/acceleration) followed by 11 perturbations at a lower
intensity (level-II). If in early phase, participants experienced
> 3/5 falls, they were trained at a still lower intensity (level-I).
Post-training, immediate scaling and short-term retention at 3 weeks
post-training was examined. Perturbation outcome and post-slip
center-of-mass (COM) stability was analyzed.
Results
On the pre-training trial, 60%
of high and 100% of low-functioning participants fell. High-functioning
group tolerated and adapted at training-intensity level-II but
low-functioning group were trained at level-I (all had > 3 falls on
level-II). At respective training intensities, both groups significantly
lowered fall incidence from 1st through 11th trials, with improved
post-slip stability and anterior shift in COM position, resulting from
increased compensatory step length. Both groups demonstrated immediate
scaling and short-term retention of the acquired stability control.
Conclusion
Chronic stroke survivors are
able to acquire and retain adaptive reactive balance skills to reduce
fall risk. Although similar adaptation was demonstrated by both groups,
the low-functioning group might require greater dosage with gradual
increment in training intensity.
Keywords
- Perturbation training
- Adaptation
- Motor impairment
- Stroke
Introduction
Approximately
more than 800,000 individuals annually suffer from stroke and its
associated detrimental long term disability in the USA [1].
The primary deficits associated with stroke, such as sensorimotor
impairment, postural dysfunction, and cognitive impairment, result in
secondary complications such as falls [2, 3, 4].
The high risk of falls during the acute phase persists even into the
chronic phase when people with chronic stroke (PwCS) regain their
ambulatory ability; especially predisposing them to falls from
unexpected environmental perturbations such as slips or trips [5].
Reactive balance control plays a crucial role in recovering from large unexpected perturbations, thereby lowering fall-risk [6, 7, 8, 9, 10].
A rapid and sufficiently large stepping response helps to regain
postural stability by restoring the displaced base of support (BOS) and
providing the necessary lever arm to generate adequate rotational
counter-torque at step touchdown to decelerate the body’s forward or
backward moving center of mass (COM) [11].
Studies examining reactive responses to stance perturbations in PwCS
have reported delayed onset latencies of lower extremity muscles, with
smaller amplitude and altered sequence of activation [12, 13].
Moreover, PwCS often show delayed compensatory step initiation with a
short compensatory step, or they exhibit an aborted step or multiple
stepping responses; all of which compromise postural stability and
increase fall-risk [14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20].
Considering
the above-mentioned evidence, training reactive responses in PwCS could
be critical for fall-risk reduction in this population. Leveraging the
principle of task specificity, perturbation training elicits reactive
motor adaptations and induces learning of effective recovery strategies
by improving COM state stability control and compensatory stepping
responses throughout trials [21, 22].
Even a single session of perturbation training has shown to induce
longer-term reduction in laboratory-induced and real-life falls in
healthy older adults [23].
However, limited evidence exists on the effect of perturbation training
on acquiring adaptations for fall-risk reduction in PwCS.
The
role of neuroplasticity, specifically reorganization of the
sensorimotor cortex, in optimizing motor recovery and function for both
skilled volitional and locomotor tasks in PwCS is well known [24, 25, 26].
It is also established that the cerebellum and cerebral cortex play a
crucial role in acquiring locomotor-balance adaptations [27, 28].
While cerebellar stroke can impair acquisition of motor adaptation,
this ability has been shown to be intact in cortical stroke [27, 29, 30].
Nonetheless, little is known whether adaptations within the reactive
balance control system are possible post-stroke. A preliminary training
study employing therapist-induced, small magnitude external pull-push
perturbations showed reduction in daily falls for sub-acute stroke
patients [31].
Such low intensity perturbations, while appropriate for individuals in
the early phases of recovery, might not be challenging enough to mimic
real-life perturbations faced by community-dwelling PwCS.
Previously,
it has been established that there is a need for different dosage
considerations when training patients with varying degrees of impairment
in order to improve locomotor balance control [32].
However, there is lack of evidence on recommendations for an optimal
perturbation training intensity for PwCS with different severity of
motor impairment to suitably match their motor capabilities and
ultimately induce reactive adaptation. It is also unknown if PwCS with
varying levels of motor impairments could safely tolerate the
perturbation intensity dosages provided to healthy young and older
adults for training.
This
study aimed to examine if PwCS could acquire reactive adaptation to
large slip-like stance perturbations, and if adaptive gains differed
based on the perturbation intensity and severity of motor impairment. We
also examined if the adaptive gains could be scaled when exposed to a
higher perturbation intensity and then retained over several weeks.
More at link.
No comments:
Post a Comment