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Effects of augmented exercise therapy time after stroke: a meta-analysis

Effects of augmented exercise therapy time after stroke: a meta-analysis
Effects of augmented exercise therapy time after stroke: a meta-analysis
Background and purpose: to present a systematic review of studies that addresses the effects of intensity of augmented exercise therapy time (AETT) on activities of daily living (ADL), walking, and dexterity in patients with stroke.
Summary of review: a database of articles published from 1966 to November 2003 was compiled from MEDLINE, CINAHL, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, PEDro, DARE, and PiCarta using combinations of the following key words: stroke, cerebrovascular disorders, physical therapy, physiotherapy, occupational therapy, exercise therapy, rehabilitation, intensity, dose-response relationship, effectiveness, and randomized controlled trial. References presented in relevant publications were examined as well as abstracts in proceedings. Studies that satisfied the following selection criteria were included: (1) patients had a diagnosis of stroke (2) effects of intensity of exercise training were investigated; and (3) design of the study was a randomized controlled trial (RCT). For each outcome measure, the estimated effect size (ES) and the summary effect size (SES) expressed in standard deviation units (SDU) were calculated for ADL, walking speed, and dexterity using fixed and random effect models. Correlation coefficients were calculated between observed individual effect sizes on ADL of each study, additional time spent on exercise training, and methodological quality. Cumulative meta-analyses (random effects model) adjusted for the difference in treatment intensity in each study was used for the trials evaluating the effects of AETT provided. Twenty of the 31 candidate studies, involving 2686 stroke patients, were included in the synthesis. The methodological quality ranged from 2 to 10 out of the maximum score of 14 points. The meta-analysis resulted in a small but statistically significant SES with regard to ADL measured at the end of the intervention phase. Further analysis showed a significant homogeneous SES for 17 studies that investigated effects of increased exercise intensity within the first 6 months after stroke. No significant SES was observed for the 3 studies conducted in the chronic phase. Cumulative meta-analysis strongly suggests that at least a 16-hour difference in treatment time between experimental and control groups provided in the first 6 months after stroke is needed to obtain significant differences in ADL. A significant SES supporting a higher intensity was also observed for instrumental ADL and walking speed, whereas no significant SES was found for dexterity.
Conclusions: the results of the present research synthesis support the hypothesis that augmented exercise therapy has a small but favorable effect on ADL, particularly if therapy input is augmented at least 16 hours within the first 6 months after stroke. This meta-analysis also suggests that clinically relevant treatment effects may be achieved on instrumental ADL and gait speed.
activities of daily living, article, chronic, diagnosis, gait, human, occupational therapy, outcome, patient, quality, rehabilitation, research, stroke, therapy, walking
0039-2499
2529-2539
Kwakkel, Gert
5fd0fc86-e067-4aea-8ede-6644bdbabdc6
van Peppen, Roland
da6a638b-3059-4fd2-9bc1-18925e5af454
Wagenaar, Robert C.
6541251f-4cdf-4f37-8962-c65af432fa10
Wood Dauphinee, Sharon
265fe25d-5f8a-4629-99ca-6f9f866c6722
Richards, Carol
4c5f66e2-8042-49e2-b1e3-c41d8ce49752
Ashburn, Ann
818b9ce8-f025-429e-9532-43ee4fd5f991
Miller, Kimberly
51a05a39-f89f-4d55-af00-34d5dc95add2
Lincoln, Nadina
e489e48f-938e-421c-9ed1-86bac6c6013d
Partridge, Cecily
b8d7aee3-98e5-4d52-9911-048965704e67
Wellwood, Ian
1ccd5b59-4f80-42a9-bfd1-67a715b1b08c
Langhorne, Peter
ab0e4d6a-3d2e-4b1b-85c0-994b5b93cf63
Kwakkel, Gert
5fd0fc86-e067-4aea-8ede-6644bdbabdc6
van Peppen, Roland
da6a638b-3059-4fd2-9bc1-18925e5af454
Wagenaar, Robert C.
6541251f-4cdf-4f37-8962-c65af432fa10
Wood Dauphinee, Sharon
265fe25d-5f8a-4629-99ca-6f9f866c6722
Richards, Carol
4c5f66e2-8042-49e2-b1e3-c41d8ce49752
Ashburn, Ann
818b9ce8-f025-429e-9532-43ee4fd5f991
Miller, Kimberly
51a05a39-f89f-4d55-af00-34d5dc95add2
Lincoln, Nadina
e489e48f-938e-421c-9ed1-86bac6c6013d
Partridge, Cecily
b8d7aee3-98e5-4d52-9911-048965704e67
Wellwood, Ian
1ccd5b59-4f80-42a9-bfd1-67a715b1b08c
Langhorne, Peter
ab0e4d6a-3d2e-4b1b-85c0-994b5b93cf63

Kwakkel, Gert, van Peppen, Roland, Wagenaar, Robert C., Wood Dauphinee, Sharon, Richards, Carol, Ashburn, Ann, Miller, Kimberly, Lincoln, Nadina, Partridge, Cecily, Wellwood, Ian and Langhorne, Peter (2004) Effects of augmented exercise therapy time after stroke: a meta-analysis. Stroke, 35 (11), 2529-2539. (doi:10.1161/01.STR.0000143153.76460.7d).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background and purpose: to present a systematic review of studies that addresses the effects of intensity of augmented exercise therapy time (AETT) on activities of daily living (ADL), walking, and dexterity in patients with stroke.
Summary of review: a database of articles published from 1966 to November 2003 was compiled from MEDLINE, CINAHL, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, PEDro, DARE, and PiCarta using combinations of the following key words: stroke, cerebrovascular disorders, physical therapy, physiotherapy, occupational therapy, exercise therapy, rehabilitation, intensity, dose-response relationship, effectiveness, and randomized controlled trial. References presented in relevant publications were examined as well as abstracts in proceedings. Studies that satisfied the following selection criteria were included: (1) patients had a diagnosis of stroke (2) effects of intensity of exercise training were investigated; and (3) design of the study was a randomized controlled trial (RCT). For each outcome measure, the estimated effect size (ES) and the summary effect size (SES) expressed in standard deviation units (SDU) were calculated for ADL, walking speed, and dexterity using fixed and random effect models. Correlation coefficients were calculated between observed individual effect sizes on ADL of each study, additional time spent on exercise training, and methodological quality. Cumulative meta-analyses (random effects model) adjusted for the difference in treatment intensity in each study was used for the trials evaluating the effects of AETT provided. Twenty of the 31 candidate studies, involving 2686 stroke patients, were included in the synthesis. The methodological quality ranged from 2 to 10 out of the maximum score of 14 points. The meta-analysis resulted in a small but statistically significant SES with regard to ADL measured at the end of the intervention phase. Further analysis showed a significant homogeneous SES for 17 studies that investigated effects of increased exercise intensity within the first 6 months after stroke. No significant SES was observed for the 3 studies conducted in the chronic phase. Cumulative meta-analysis strongly suggests that at least a 16-hour difference in treatment time between experimental and control groups provided in the first 6 months after stroke is needed to obtain significant differences in ADL. A significant SES supporting a higher intensity was also observed for instrumental ADL and walking speed, whereas no significant SES was found for dexterity.
Conclusions: the results of the present research synthesis support the hypothesis that augmented exercise therapy has a small but favorable effect on ADL, particularly if therapy input is augmented at least 16 hours within the first 6 months after stroke. This meta-analysis also suggests that clinically relevant treatment effects may be achieved on instrumental ADL and gait speed.

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More information

Published date: 1 November 2004
Keywords: activities of daily living, article, chronic, diagnosis, gait, human, occupational therapy, outcome, patient, quality, rehabilitation, research, stroke, therapy, walking

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 17943
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/17943
ISSN: 0039-2499
PURE UUID: 332152da-890b-4174-abbc-9f7ced8b0e1c

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Date deposited: 31 Jan 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 06:02

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Contributors

Author: Gert Kwakkel
Author: Roland van Peppen
Author: Robert C. Wagenaar
Author: Sharon Wood Dauphinee
Author: Carol Richards
Author: Ann Ashburn
Author: Kimberly Miller
Author: Nadina Lincoln
Author: Cecily Partridge
Author: Ian Wellwood
Author: Peter Langhorne

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