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Lundi : 8h-18h30
Mardi : 8h-17h30
Mercredi 9h-16h30
Jeudi : 8h30-18h30
Vendredi : 8h30-12h30 et 13h-14h30
Votre centre de documentation sera exceptionnellement fermé de 12h30 à 13h ce lundi 18 novembre.
Egalement, il sera fermé de 12h30 à 13h30 ce mercredi 20 novembre.
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Auteur Arun B. Taly |
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Bodyweight-supported treadmill training for retraining gait among chronic stroke survivors: A randomized controlled study / Abhishek Srivastava in Annals of physical and rehabilitation medicine, Vol. 59, n° 4 (September 2016)
[article]
Titre : Bodyweight-supported treadmill training for retraining gait among chronic stroke survivors: A randomized controlled study Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Abhishek Srivastava, Auteur ; Arun B. Taly, Auteur ; Anupam Gupta, Auteur Année de publication : 2016 Article en page(s) : p. 235-241 Langues : Anglais (eng) Français (fre) Mots-clés : Accident cérébrovasculaire Rééducation fonctionnelle Mouvement corporel Bodyweight-support treadmill training,Chronic stroke survivors,Gait training,Stroke rehabilitation Résumé : Objective: To evaluate the role of bodyweight-supported treadmill training (BWSTT) for chronic stroke survivors.
Design: Prospective, randomized controlled study.
Methods: Patients with a first episode of supratentorial arterial stroke of more than 3months’ duration were randomly allocated to 3 groups: overground gait training, treadmill training without bodyweight support, and BWSTT (20 sessions, 30min/day, 5days/week for 4weeks). The primary outcome was overground walking speed and endurance and secondary outcome was improvement by the Scandinavian Stroke Scale (SSS) and locomotion by the Functional Ambulation Category (FAC). We analyzed data within groups (pre-training vs post-training and pre-training vs 3-month follow-up) and between groups (at post-training and 3-month follow-up).
Results: We included 45 patients (36 males, mean post-stroke duration 16.51+15.14months); 40 (89.9%) completed training and 34 (75.5%) were followed up at 3months. All primary and secondary outcome measures showed significant improvement (P <0.05) in the 3 groups at the end of training, which was sustained at 3-month follow-up (other than walking endurance in group I). Outcomes were better with BWSTT but not significantly (P >0.05).
Conclusion: BWSTT offers improvement in gait but has no significant advantage over conventional gait-training strategies for chronic stroke survivors.Permalink : ./index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=45206
in Annals of physical and rehabilitation medicine > Vol. 59, n° 4 (September 2016) . - p. 235-241[article] Bodyweight-supported treadmill training for retraining gait among chronic stroke survivors: A randomized controlled study [texte imprimé] / Abhishek Srivastava, Auteur ; Arun B. Taly, Auteur ; Anupam Gupta, Auteur . - 2016 . - p. 235-241.
Langues : Anglais (eng) Français (fre)
in Annals of physical and rehabilitation medicine > Vol. 59, n° 4 (September 2016) . - p. 235-241
Mots-clés : Accident cérébrovasculaire Rééducation fonctionnelle Mouvement corporel Bodyweight-support treadmill training,Chronic stroke survivors,Gait training,Stroke rehabilitation Résumé : Objective: To evaluate the role of bodyweight-supported treadmill training (BWSTT) for chronic stroke survivors.
Design: Prospective, randomized controlled study.
Methods: Patients with a first episode of supratentorial arterial stroke of more than 3months’ duration were randomly allocated to 3 groups: overground gait training, treadmill training without bodyweight support, and BWSTT (20 sessions, 30min/day, 5days/week for 4weeks). The primary outcome was overground walking speed and endurance and secondary outcome was improvement by the Scandinavian Stroke Scale (SSS) and locomotion by the Functional Ambulation Category (FAC). We analyzed data within groups (pre-training vs post-training and pre-training vs 3-month follow-up) and between groups (at post-training and 3-month follow-up).
Results: We included 45 patients (36 males, mean post-stroke duration 16.51+15.14months); 40 (89.9%) completed training and 34 (75.5%) were followed up at 3months. All primary and secondary outcome measures showed significant improvement (P <0.05) in the 3 groups at the end of training, which was sustained at 3-month follow-up (other than walking endurance in group I). Outcomes were better with BWSTT but not significantly (P >0.05).
Conclusion: BWSTT offers improvement in gait but has no significant advantage over conventional gait-training strategies for chronic stroke survivors.Permalink : ./index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=45206 Exemplaires (1)
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