This has been out there for years, doesn't your stroke hospital already have it?Or are you OK with your hospital being incompetent?
Moterum iStride (2 posts to March 2019)
Wearable gait device for stroke gait rehabilitation at home
Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation , Volume 28(6) , Pgs. 443-454.
NARIC Accession Number: J87256. What's this?
ISSN: 1074-9357.
Author(s): Huizenga, David ; Rashford, Lauren ; Darcy, Brianne ; Lundin, Elizabeth ; Medas, Ryan ; Shultz, S. Tyler ; DuBose, Elizabeth ; Reed, Kyle B..
Publication Year: 2021.
Number of Pages: 12.
NARIC Accession Number: J87256. What's this?
ISSN: 1074-9357.
Author(s): Huizenga, David ; Rashford, Lauren ; Darcy, Brianne ; Lundin, Elizabeth ; Medas, Ryan ; Shultz, S. Tyler ; DuBose, Elizabeth ; Reed, Kyle B..
Publication Year: 2021.
Number of Pages: 12.
Abstract:
Study investigated whether using the iStride gait device within the
home environment can provide safe and effective gait treatment for
individuals with hemiparetic gait impairments caused by stroke. The
device is worn over the shoe on the non-paretic foot during overground
ambulation. Twelve 30-minute sessions of walking on the device were
administered in each participant’s home environment. Twenty-one
participants who were more than one-year post-stroke received the
treatment. The Ten-Meter Walk Test, Timed Up and Go Test, Berg Balance
Scale, Functional Gait Assessment, and Stroke Specific Quality of Life
Scale were performed before and one week after treatment. Safety,
treatment plan compliance, and subjective responses were also recorded
during the study period. Results demonstrated significant improvement on
all five outcome measures from before treatment to one week after the
last treatment session using two-tailed paired t-tests. Seventy-six
percent of participants improved beyond the small meaningful change or
minimal detectable change on three or more outcome measures. Sixty-seven
percent of participants improved clinically in gait speed and on at
least one of the fall risk assessment inventories. Eighty-one percent of
the participants were able to perform the treatment in their home
without assistance before the end of week three. Findings suggest that
the iStride gait device can facilitate effective, safe, and
home-accessible gait treatment opportunities for individuals with
hemiparesis from stroke.
Descriptor Terms: AMBULATION, DEVICES EVALUATION, HEMIPLEGIA, HOME BASED, MOBILITY AIDS, MOBILITY TRAINING, ORTHOTICS, REHABILITATION TECHNOLOGY, STROKE.
Can this document be ordered through NARIC's document delivery service*?: Y.
Citation: Huizenga, David , Rashford, Lauren , Darcy, Brianne , Lundin, Elizabeth , Medas, Ryan , Shultz, S. Tyler , DuBose, Elizabeth , Reed, Kyle B.. (2021). Wearable gait device for stroke gait rehabilitation at home. Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation , 28(6), Pgs. 443-454. Retrieved 10/23/2021, from REHABDATA database.
Descriptor Terms: AMBULATION, DEVICES EVALUATION, HEMIPLEGIA, HOME BASED, MOBILITY AIDS, MOBILITY TRAINING, ORTHOTICS, REHABILITATION TECHNOLOGY, STROKE.
Can this document be ordered through NARIC's document delivery service*?: Y.
Citation: Huizenga, David , Rashford, Lauren , Darcy, Brianne , Lundin, Elizabeth , Medas, Ryan , Shultz, S. Tyler , DuBose, Elizabeth , Reed, Kyle B.. (2021). Wearable gait device for stroke gait rehabilitation at home. Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation , 28(6), Pgs. 443-454. Retrieved 10/23/2021, from REHABDATA database.
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