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Effect of using home-based dynamic intermittent pneumatic compression therapy during periods of physical activity on functional and vascular health outcomes in chronic stroke: a randomized controlled clinical trial

Effect of using home-based dynamic intermittent pneumatic compression therapy during periods of physical activity on functional and vascular health outcomes in chronic stroke: a randomized controlled clinical trial
Effect of using home-based dynamic intermittent pneumatic compression therapy during periods of physical activity on functional and vascular health outcomes in chronic stroke: a randomized controlled clinical trial
Background: intermittent pneumatic compression (IPC) therapy may benefit stroke patients by eliciting more intensive training sessions that may result in better health, mobility and ultimately quality of life. The purpose of this randomized controlled trial was to assess the effect of using a home-based IPC device on functional outcomes and vascular health in individuals with chronic stroke.

Methods: thirty-one stroke survivors (64.3 ± 14.3y; 4.3 ± 2.7y since stroke) completed pre- and post-intervention assessments of functional capacity (six-minute walk test [6MWT], timed-up-and-go, 10m walk test), vascular health (pulse wave analysis, carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity), and physical activity. Following the pre-assessment, individuals were randomly assigned to either a daily, 12-week, home-based IPC group, or to a usual care control (CON) group. Outcomes were assessed using analysis of covariance (ANCOVA), controlling for age and any baseline differences.

Results: following ANCOVA, a significant increase in 6MWT walking distance was observed post-assessment for the IPC (Mean ±  SD [95%CI]; 188 ±  19 m [177–199m]) but not the CON group (167 ±  19 m [157–178m]) (p <  0.05). A significant reduction in peripheral systolic blood pressure was reported at the post-assessment for the IPC group (136.2 ±  8.0 mmHg [131.9–140.4 mmHg]) but not for CON (142.2 ±  8.0 mmHg [138.1–144.6 mmHg]) (p <  0.05). Similar findings were observed for central systolic blood pressure. Physical activity levels significantly increased at the post-assessment for IPC (1857 ±  879 MET·min−1·week−1 [1390–2325 MET·min−1·week−1]) but not for the CON group (1161 ± 879 MET·min−1·week−1 [677–1645 MET·min−1·week−1]), while for time spent sitting, a significantly greater reduction was observed at the post-assessment for the IPC group (396 ±  86 mins [350–442 mins]) compared to CON (486 ± 86 mins [439–534 mins]) (both p <  0.05).

Conclusions: the observed improvements in functional mobility, cardiovascular health, increased physical activity and reduced sedentary time demonstrates important clinical implications of ‘home-based’ IPC therapy as a clinical training aid for stroke rehabilitation. Home-based IPC therapy could serve as an adjunct to conventional rehabilitation, however, further research is needed to determine whether IPC therapy can sustain or improve function over time for individuals in the chronic stage of recovery.
1932-6203
Faulkner, James
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Paine, Eloise
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Hudson, Nick
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Hannah, Scott
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Dennis-Jones, Amy
b3957e79-84c5-48e0-8ea7-9039c0d4d261
Martinelli, Louis
393373c7-ad5d-4156-8117-29e57133d89c
Hobbs, Helen
651d564d-ee05-41bd-9191-87447f03f4b4
Faulkner, James
b2bd38c9-667c-42e8-ad1e-6df58d1e3f7a
Paine, Eloise
0eaebc3a-0c08-42f3-8cef-ad1a250dd8a3
Hudson, Nick
7729a1a2-dd39-4942-a8a9-dae162644947
Hannah, Scott
bfea6350-6f45-4317-b504-849b8c933101
Dennis-Jones, Amy
b3957e79-84c5-48e0-8ea7-9039c0d4d261
Martinelli, Louis
393373c7-ad5d-4156-8117-29e57133d89c
Hobbs, Helen
651d564d-ee05-41bd-9191-87447f03f4b4

Faulkner, James, Paine, Eloise, Hudson, Nick, Hannah, Scott, Dennis-Jones, Amy, Martinelli, Louis and Hobbs, Helen (2025) Effect of using home-based dynamic intermittent pneumatic compression therapy during periods of physical activity on functional and vascular health outcomes in chronic stroke: a randomized controlled clinical trial. PLoS ONE, 20 (2), [e0318942]. (doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0318942).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: intermittent pneumatic compression (IPC) therapy may benefit stroke patients by eliciting more intensive training sessions that may result in better health, mobility and ultimately quality of life. The purpose of this randomized controlled trial was to assess the effect of using a home-based IPC device on functional outcomes and vascular health in individuals with chronic stroke.

Methods: thirty-one stroke survivors (64.3 ± 14.3y; 4.3 ± 2.7y since stroke) completed pre- and post-intervention assessments of functional capacity (six-minute walk test [6MWT], timed-up-and-go, 10m walk test), vascular health (pulse wave analysis, carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity), and physical activity. Following the pre-assessment, individuals were randomly assigned to either a daily, 12-week, home-based IPC group, or to a usual care control (CON) group. Outcomes were assessed using analysis of covariance (ANCOVA), controlling for age and any baseline differences.

Results: following ANCOVA, a significant increase in 6MWT walking distance was observed post-assessment for the IPC (Mean ±  SD [95%CI]; 188 ±  19 m [177–199m]) but not the CON group (167 ±  19 m [157–178m]) (p <  0.05). A significant reduction in peripheral systolic blood pressure was reported at the post-assessment for the IPC group (136.2 ±  8.0 mmHg [131.9–140.4 mmHg]) but not for CON (142.2 ±  8.0 mmHg [138.1–144.6 mmHg]) (p <  0.05). Similar findings were observed for central systolic blood pressure. Physical activity levels significantly increased at the post-assessment for IPC (1857 ±  879 MET·min−1·week−1 [1390–2325 MET·min−1·week−1]) but not for the CON group (1161 ± 879 MET·min−1·week−1 [677–1645 MET·min−1·week−1]), while for time spent sitting, a significantly greater reduction was observed at the post-assessment for the IPC group (396 ±  86 mins [350–442 mins]) compared to CON (486 ± 86 mins [439–534 mins]) (both p <  0.05).

Conclusions: the observed improvements in functional mobility, cardiovascular health, increased physical activity and reduced sedentary time demonstrates important clinical implications of ‘home-based’ IPC therapy as a clinical training aid for stroke rehabilitation. Home-based IPC therapy could serve as an adjunct to conventional rehabilitation, however, further research is needed to determine whether IPC therapy can sustain or improve function over time for individuals in the chronic stage of recovery.

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Accepted/In Press date: 22 January 2025
Published date: 18 February 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 498525
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/498525
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: 3c33a710-559a-44c7-8cdc-1aaa9727e7a4
ORCID for James Faulkner: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3704-6737

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Date deposited: 20 Feb 2025 17:55
Last modified: 28 Feb 2025 03:18

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Contributors

Author: James Faulkner ORCID iD
Author: Eloise Paine
Author: Nick Hudson
Author: Scott Hannah
Author: Amy Dennis-Jones
Author: Louis Martinelli
Author: Helen Hobbs

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