4.6 Article

Chronic Stroke Survivors Benefit From High-Intensity Aerobic Treadmill Exercise: A Randomized Control Trial

Journal

NEUROREHABILITATION AND NEURAL REPAIR
Volume 26, Issue 1, Pages 85-95

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1545968311418675

Keywords

chronic stroke; rehabilitation; aerobic exercise; treadmill training

Funding

  1. Forschungskolleg Geriatrie of the Robert Bosch Foundation

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Background and objective. Ambulatory subjects after stroke may benefit from gait-oriented cardiovascular fitness training, but trials to date have not primarily assessed older persons. Methods. Thirty-eight subjects (age > 60 years) with residual hemiparetic gait were enrolled > 6 months after stroke. Participants were randomized to receive 3 months (3x/week) progressive graded, high-intensity aerobic treadmill exercise (TAEX) or conventional care physiotherapy. Primary outcome measures were peak exercise capacity (Vo(2peak)) and sustained walking capacity in 6-minute walks (6MW). Secondary measures were gait velocity in 10-m walks, Berg Balance Scale, functional leg strength (5 chair-rise), self-rated mobility (Rivermead Mobility Index), and quality of life (SF-12). Results. Thirty-six participants completed the study (18 TAEX, 18 controls). TAEX but not conventional care improved Vo(2peak) (difference 6.4 mL/kg/min, P < .001) and 6MW (53 m, P < .001). Likewise, maximum walking speed (0.13 m/s, P = .01), balance (P < .05), and the mental subscore of the SF-12 (P < .01) improved more after TAEX. Gains in Vo(2peak) correlated with the degree at which training intensity could be progressed in the individual participant (P < .01). Better walking was related to progression in treadmill velocity and training duration (P < .001). Vo(2peak) and 6MW performances were still higher 1 year after the end of training when compared with the baseline, although endurance walking (6MW) at 1 year was lower than immediately after training (P < .01). Conclusion. This trial demonstrates that TAEX effectively improves cardiovascular fitness and gait in persons with chronic stroke.

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