Perturbation Training for Fall-risk Reduction Among Stroke Survivors
NCT ID: NCT03205527
Last Updated: 2025-08-21
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
NA
91 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2017-04-26
2026-03-15
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Participants in this study will be individuals with chronic (\> 6 months) hemiparesis following stroke or individuals with sub-acute stroke (\> 6weeks and \< 6 months), ambulatory (with or without assistive device) and more than 21 years of age. Subjects will be screened for the inclusion criteria. If subjects pass the screening, they will go through the full clinical balance assessment and laboratory dynamic stability test. The chronic stroke survivors will be randomized into two groups: - Group A: Slip training group; Group B: Control group. While, the sub-acute stroke survivors will be randomized into two groups: - Group C: Slip training group; Group D: Control group.
For the slip training groups (A and C), all subjects' normal walking pattern and their recovery responses to slip will be recorded with a motion tracking system (including videotaping) while they walk across an instrumented area along a straight path in the lab. A slip will be induced after a subject steps on a low-friction platform.
For the chronic stroke subjects, baseline activity monitoring using wearable sensors will be performed for up to four weeks prior to the training session followed by activity monitoring for 12 months. While for the sub-acute stroke subjects, it would be done for 6 months.
For groups A and B, the follow-up stability test will be at 6 and 12 months post-training session, which will consist only of one slip induced on the training side and contralateral side. For groups C and D, follow-up session is 6 months post training session.
Incidence of falls and physical activity will be monitored between training and re-test sessions through falls, activity monitoring-questionnaire to describe details of the falls and through the wearable sensors for groups A, B, C and D.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Slip training for chronic stroke
Chronic stroke subjects in this training group will receive bilateral overground, slip perturbation training.
Overground slip perturbation training
Slips will be induced by a low-friction platform (65×30×0.6 cm, μ\<0.05) embedded side-by-side in the walking path, set nearly flush with the floor surround. The moveable platform, mounted on top of a pair of force platforms (AMTI, Newton, MA) for measuring ground reaction forces is firmly locked in a stationary position. An unannounced release occurs at heel strike of the perturbed, without the knowledge of subject, after which the platform is free to slide up to 150 cm. The mechanical release is controlled by the loading on the force platforms and the computer.
Control for chronic stroke
Chronic stroke subjects, after baseline walking trials, will walk for about 30 trials at their preferred walking pace to match the total trials the other groups receive before receiving a single slip each randomly on their non-paretic and paretic sides.
No interventions assigned to this group
Slip training for sub-acute stroke
Sub-acute stroke survivors in this training group will receive bilateral overground, slip perturbation training.
Overground slip perturbation training
Slips will be induced by a low-friction platform (65×30×0.6 cm, μ\<0.05) embedded side-by-side in the walking path, set nearly flush with the floor surround. The moveable platform, mounted on top of a pair of force platforms (AMTI, Newton, MA) for measuring ground reaction forces is firmly locked in a stationary position. An unannounced release occurs at heel strike of the perturbed, without the knowledge of subject, after which the platform is free to slide up to 150 cm. The mechanical release is controlled by the loading on the force platforms and the computer.
Control for sub-acute stroke
Sub-acute stroke subjects, after baseline walking trials, will walk for about 30 trials at their preferred walking pace to match the total trials the other groups receive before receiving a single slip each randomly on their non-paretic and paretic sides.
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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Overground slip perturbation training
Slips will be induced by a low-friction platform (65×30×0.6 cm, μ\<0.05) embedded side-by-side in the walking path, set nearly flush with the floor surround. The moveable platform, mounted on top of a pair of force platforms (AMTI, Newton, MA) for measuring ground reaction forces is firmly locked in a stationary position. An unannounced release occurs at heel strike of the perturbed, without the knowledge of subject, after which the platform is free to slide up to 150 cm. The mechanical release is controlled by the loading on the force platforms and the computer.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Subjects with no other acute and significant neurological, cardiopulmonary, musculoskeletal or systemic diagnosis or have undergone a recent major surgery (\<6 months) or hospitalization (\<3 months) and not on any sedative drugs
* Ability to walk at least 10m with or without assistive device which includes use of ankle orthosis or functional electrical stimulation devices (which is equivalent to having a score of\> 4, dependent supervision on Functional Ambulatory category scale)
Exclusion Criteria
* Cognitive impairment (Mini Mental State Exam score\<25)
* Aphasia (\<71% on Mississippi Aphasia Screening Test)
* Severe depression ( \> 15 on Geriatric Depression Scale)
* Severe obesity (BMI \>35Kilogram/m2)
* Complains of shortness of breath, or uncontrolled pain (\> 3/10 on VAS), or if pulse oxygen drops \<92% on the 6 minute walk test (for endurance)
* Uncontrolled hypertension (resting systolic blood pressure \> 165 mmHg and/or diastolic blood pressure \> 110mmHg)
* Resting heart rate \> 85% of age-predicted maximal heart rate
* Resting oxygen saturation \<95%
21 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
NIH
University of Illinois at Chicago
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Tanvi Bhatt
Assistant Professor
Principal Investigators
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Tanvi Bhatt, PhD PT
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of Illinois at Chicago
Locations
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University of Illinois at Chicago
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Countries
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References
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Bhatt T, Dusane S, Gangwani R, Wang S, Kannan L. Motor adaptation and immediate retention to overground gait-slip perturbation training in people with chronic stroke: an experimental trial with a comparison group. Front Sports Act Living. 2023 Sep 13;5:1195773. doi: 10.3389/fspor.2023.1195773. eCollection 2023.
Dusane S, Bhatt T. Can prior exposure to repeated non-paretic slips improve reactive responses on novel paretic slips among people with chronic stroke? Exp Brain Res. 2022 Apr;240(4):1069-1080. doi: 10.1007/s00221-021-06300-8. Epub 2022 Feb 1.
Gangwani R, Dusane S, Wang S, Kannan L, Wang E, Fung J, Bhatt T. Slip-Fall Predictors in Community-Dwelling, Ambulatory Stroke Survivors: A Cross-sectional Study. J Neurol Phys Ther. 2020 Oct;44(4):248-255. doi: 10.1097/NPT.0000000000000331.
Other Identifiers
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2016-0933
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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