Your feasibility definition is totally wrong, you should be measuring the feasibility of getting recovery done.
Feasibility and preliminary efficacy of gait training assisted by multichannel functional electrical stimulation in early stroke rehabilitation: A pilot randomized controlled trial
Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair (NNR) , Volume 35(2) , Pgs. 131-144.
NARIC Accession Number: J85575. What's this?
ISSN: 1545-9683.
Author(s): van Bloemendaal, Maijke ; Bus, Sicco A. ; Nollet, Frans ; Geurts, Alexander C. H.; Beelen, Anita.
Publication Year: 2021.
Number of Pages: 14.
Abstract:
NARIC Accession Number: J85575. What's this?
ISSN: 1545-9683.
Author(s): van Bloemendaal, Maijke ; Bus, Sicco A. ; Nollet, Frans ; Geurts, Alexander C. H.; Beelen, Anita.
Publication Year: 2021.
Number of Pages: 14.
Abstract:
Study evaluated the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of up to 10
weeks of gait training assisted by multichannel functional electrical
stimulation (MFES gait training) applied to the peroneal nerve and knee
flexor or extensor muscle on the recovery of gait symmetry and walking
capacity in patients starting in the subacute phase after stroke. Forty
inpatient participants (≤31 days after stroke) were randomized to MFES
gait training (experimental group) or conventional gait training
(control group). Gait training was delivered in 30-minute sessions each
workday. Feasibility was determined by adherence (≥75 percent of
sessions) and satisfaction with gait training (score ≥7 out of 10).
Primary outcome for efficacy was step length symmetry. Secondary
outcomes included other spatiotemporal gait parameters and walking
capacity (Functional Gait Assessment and 10-Meter Walk Test). Linear
mixed models estimated treatment effect post intervention and at 3-month
follow-up. Thirty-seven participants completed the study protocol (19
experimental group participants). Feasibility was confirmed by good
adherence (90 percent of the participants) and participant satisfaction
(median score 8). Both groups improved on all outcomes over time. No
significant group differences in recovery were found for any outcome.
The findings suggest that MFES gait training is feasible early after
stroke, but MFES efficacy for improving step length symmetry, other
spatiotemporal gait parameters, or walking capacity could not be
demonstrated.
Descriptor Terms: AMBULATION, ELECTRICAL STIMULATION, FEASIBILITY STUDIES, INTERVENTION, MOBILITY TRAINING, MUSCLES, NERVES, STROKE.
Can this document be ordered through NARIC's document delivery service*?: Y.
Citation: van Bloemendaal, Maijke , Bus, Sicco A. , Nollet, Frans , Geurts, Alexander C. H., Beelen, Anita. (2021). Feasibility and preliminary efficacy of gait training assisted by multichannel functional electrical stimulation in early stroke rehabilitation: A pilot randomized controlled trial. Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair (NNR) , 35(2), Pgs. 131-144. Retrieved 3/19/2021, from REHABDATA database.
Descriptor Terms: AMBULATION, ELECTRICAL STIMULATION, FEASIBILITY STUDIES, INTERVENTION, MOBILITY TRAINING, MUSCLES, NERVES, STROKE.
Can this document be ordered through NARIC's document delivery service*?: Y.
Citation: van Bloemendaal, Maijke , Bus, Sicco A. , Nollet, Frans , Geurts, Alexander C. H., Beelen, Anita. (2021). Feasibility and preliminary efficacy of gait training assisted by multichannel functional electrical stimulation in early stroke rehabilitation: A pilot randomized controlled trial. Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair (NNR) , 35(2), Pgs. 131-144. Retrieved 3/19/2021, from REHABDATA database.
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