Optimal Intensity of Reactive Balance Training Post-stroke
NCT ID: NCT06555016
Last Updated: 2025-01-27
Study Results
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Basic Information
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RECRUITING
NA
63 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2024-11-11
2027-06-30
Brief Summary
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Training intensity is the difficulty or challenge of the training program. For other types of exercise (like 'cardio' or strength training) if the intensity of exercise is increased, someone can get the same benefits in less time than with lower intensity exercise. Physiotherapists report that they have limited time in rehabilitation to do everything they need to do with their stroke patients, so it would be valuable to know if high-intensity RBT improves balance reactions quickly. The goal of this study is to see if more intense RBT improves balance reactions faster than less intense RBT.
People with chronic stroke will be randomly placed in one of three groups: high-intensity RBT, moderate-intensity RBT, or a walking control group. The investigators will find the fastest moving platform speed that participants can respond to with single step (multi-step threshold). There will then be 4 1-hour long training sessions in one week. Participants in the high-intensity group will experience platform movements that are 50% faster than the multi-step threshold. Participants in the moderate-intensity group will experience platform movements at the multi-step threshold. Participants in both RBT groups will experience 36 multi-directional platform movements in each training session, causing them to start to fall forwards, to the left, or to the right. Participants in the walking group will walk on the platform 36 times without any platform movements. The investigators will measure how quickly people improve their balance reactions over the training program.
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Detailed Description
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Clinicians are unsure how to optimally prescribe RBT. Exercise is often prescribed considering frequency, intensity, time, and type; these parameters are interdependent. For example, as intensity increases, frequency or time can decrease to achieve similar benefits. Clinicians report that limited time in rehabilitation services and competing rehabilitation goals and priorities mean that there is little time available to include RBT in a client's treatment plan. Therefore, it would be valuable to know if a short duration of high-intensity RBT can improve reactive balance control post-stroke. However, it is possible that people with stroke would not tolerate high intensity perturbations and, therefore, require lower-intensity but long-duration RBT. No study has directly compared different RBT training intensities among people with stroke.
The purpose of this study is to determine the optimal intensity of RBT post-stroke. The 'optimal' intensity is the intensity that improves reactive balance control in fewer sessions, without any apparent negative consequences (i.e., no increase in adverse outcomes). Responses to backward-fall perturbations will be assessed at the end of each session, and at the one-week retention time-point. An untrained perturbation (i.e., backward-fall perturbation) will be used to test transfer of learning to a novel context. Participants will experience 3 forward-directed platform translations, evoking a backward loss of balance, at the multi-step threshold. Because backward falls are more challenging than forward or lateral falls, a backward-fall perturbation at the forward-fall multi-step threshold should evoke a multi-step reaction, at least prior to training. Testing at each participant's multi-step threshold ensures that participants will initially experience challenges responding to the perturbation and there is room for improvement with training. The primary outcome will be number of steps taken to recover balance.
The investigators will calculate the learning rate for each participant by fitting an exponential function, a+b(e\^(- t/x) ), to their data (average number of steps taken at each assessment time point), where a and b are constants, t is the assessment time point, and x is the learning rate.
The investigators expect that high-intensity training (50% above the multi-step threshold) will improve reactive stepping ability faster than moderate-intensity training (at the multi-step threshold). If the first reactive step is not effective in avoiding a fall after a loss of balance, additional steps must be taken; therefore, the number of steps needed to recover from a loss of balance is a global indicator of the effectiveness of balance reactions. The investigators will assess reactions to novel, untrained, balance perturbations throughout training, and calculate the rate of decline in average number of steps taken to recover balance (i.e., learning rate). Retention of learning will be assessed one week post-training. The investigators' primary hypotheses are:
1. Adaptation rate will be faster for high-intensity RBT than moderate-intensity RBT;
2. Adaptation rate will be faster for both RBT groups than a walking control group; and
3. Both RBT groups will have better retention of learning than the walking control group; i.e., the RBT groups will take fewer steps to respond to the novel perturbation than the walking control group one week post-training.
Secondary objectives are to compare the rate of adverse outcomes between groups, and to determine the effect of different intensities of RBT on the mechanisms underlying improved reactive stepping ability, functional balance, falls efficacy, and participation in daily activities.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
SINGLE
Study Groups
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High intensity reactive balance training
Training sessions will be overseen by a physiotherapist and will last for 1 hour over 4 consecutive days.Participants assigned to the RBT groups will experience 36 multi-directional (left-, right-, and forward-fall) perturbations in each training session, presented in an unpredictable sequence. Balance perturbations will be provided using a custom moving platform. Participants assigned to high-intensity RBT will experience perturbations at 150% of the multi-step threshold; for example, for a multi-step threshold of 2 m/s\^2 the high intensity will be 3 m/s\^2.
Reactive balance training
Reactive balance training involves clients experiencing repeated balance perturbations so that they can practice and improve control of reactions to avoid falling after a loss of balance.
Moderate intensity reactive balance training
Training sessions will be overseen by a physiotherapist and will last for 1 hour over 4 consecutive days.Participants assigned to the RBT groups will experience 36 multi-directional (left-, right-, and forward-fall) perturbations in each training session, presented in an unpredictable sequence. Balance perturbations will be provided using a custom moving platform. Participants assigned to the moderate-intensity RBT group will experience perturbations at the multi-step threshold.
Reactive balance training
Reactive balance training involves clients experiencing repeated balance perturbations so that they can practice and improve control of reactions to avoid falling after a loss of balance.
Walking control group
Training sessions will be overseen by a physiotherapist and will last for 1 hour over 4 consecutive days. Participants in the walking control group will complete 36 unperturbed walking trials on the moving platform in each training session.
Walking
Overground walking.
Interventions
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Reactive balance training
Reactive balance training involves clients experiencing repeated balance perturbations so that they can practice and improve control of reactions to avoid falling after a loss of balance.
Walking
Overground walking.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
* Have another neurological condition that could affect balance control (e.g., Parkinson's disease);
* Have cognitive impairment (Montreal Cognitive Assessment8 score \<26), or severe language or communication difficulties affecting understanding instructions;
* Have contraindications to RBT (has described by Mansfield et al., 2021), such as osteoporosis, activity restrictions due to cardiac event/surgery, or severe spasticity in the lower extremity; and/or
* Are currently attending in- or out-patient physiotherapy or supervised exercise.
20 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada
OTHER
Toronto Rehabilitation Institute
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Avril Mansfield
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigators
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Avril Mansfield, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University Health Network, Toronto
Locations
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Toronto Rehabilitation Institute
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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References
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Majoni N, Inness EL, Jagroop D, Danells CJ, Mansfield A. Investigating the optimal reactive balance training intensity in people with chronic stroke: Study protocol for a randomized control trial. PLoS One. 2025 Sep 9;20(9):e0327937. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0327937. eCollection 2025.
Other Identifiers
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24-5322
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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