Literature DB >> 14503436

Methods for a randomized trial of weight-supported treadmill training versus conventional training for walking during inpatient rehabilitation after incomplete traumatic spinal cord injury.

Bruce H Dobkin1, David Apple, Hugues Barbeau, Michele Basso, Andrea Behrman, Dan Deforge, John Ditunno, Gary Dudley, Robert Elashoff, Lisa Fugate, Susan Harkema, Michael Saulino, Michael Scott.   

Abstract

The authors describe the rationale and methodology for the first prospective, multicenter, randomized clinical trial (RCT) of a task-oriented walking intervention for subjects during early rehabilitation for an acute traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI). The experimental strategy, body weight-supported treadmill training (BWSTT), allows physical therapists to systematically train patients to walk on a treadmill at increasing speeds typical of community ambulation with increasing weight hearing. The therapists provide verbal and tactile cues to facilitate the kinematic, kinetic, and temporal features of walking. Subjects were randomly assigned to a conventional therapy program for mobility versus the same intensity and duration of a combination of BWSTT and over-ground locomotor retraining. Subjects had an incomplete SCI (American Spinal Injury Association grades B, C, and D) from C-4 to T-10 (upper motoneuron group) or from T-11 to L-3 (lower motoneuron group). Within 8 weeks of a SCI, 146 subjects were entered for 12 weeks of intervention. The 2 single-blinded primary outcome measures are the level of independence for ambulation and, for those who are able to walk, the maximal speed for walking 50 feet, tested 6 and 12 months after randomization. The trial's methodology offers a model for the feasibility of translating neuroscientific experiments into a RCT to develop evidence-based rehabilitation practices.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14503436      PMCID: PMC4162674          DOI: 10.1177/0888439003255508

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurorehabil Neural Repair        ISSN: 1545-9683            Impact factor:   3.919


  35 in total

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4.  Walking index for spinal cord injury (WISCI): an international multicenter validity and reliability study.

Authors:  J F Ditunno; P L Ditunno; V Graziani; G Scivoletto; M Bernardi; V Castellano; M Marchetti; H Barbeau; H L Frankel; J M D'Andrea Greve; H Y Ko; R Marshall; P Nance
Journal:  Spinal Cord       Date:  2000-04       Impact factor: 2.772

5.  A review of the neuropathology of human spinal cord injury with emphasis on special features.

Authors:  B A Kakulas
Journal:  J Spinal Cord Med       Date:  1999       Impact factor: 1.985

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8.  Health-related information postdischarge: telephone versus face-to-face interviewing.

Authors:  N Korner-Bitensky; S Wood-Dauphinee; J Siemiatycki; S Shapiro; R Becker
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9.  Neural control of locomotion; The central pattern generator from cats to humans.

Authors: 
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Authors:  V Dietz; M Wirz; A Curt; G Colombo
Journal:  Spinal Cord       Date:  1998-06       Impact factor: 2.772

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  42 in total

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Authors:  Aiko Kido Thompson; Richard B Stein
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2004-07-09       Impact factor: 1.972

3.  Response to 'Randomised controlled trials do not always give the results we want but that doesn't mean we should abandon randomised controlled trials'.

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Journal:  Spinal Cord       Date:  2015-08-18       Impact factor: 2.772

4.  Powered lower limb orthoses for gait rehabilitation.

Authors:  Daniel P Ferris; Gregory S Sawicki; Antoinette Domingo
Journal:  Top Spinal Cord Inj Rehabil       Date:  2005

5.  The evolution of walking-related outcomes over the first 12 weeks of rehabilitation for incomplete traumatic spinal cord injury: the multicenter randomized Spinal Cord Injury Locomotor Trial.

Authors:  B Dobkin; H Barbeau; D Deforge; J Ditunno; R Elashoff; D Apple; M Basso; A Behrman; S Harkema; M Saulino; M Scott
Journal:  Neurorehabil Neural Repair       Date:  2007 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 3.919

Review 6.  Confounders in rehabilitation trials of task-oriented training: lessons from the designs of the EXCITE and SCILT multicenter trials.

Authors:  Bruce H Dobkin
Journal:  Neurorehabil Neural Repair       Date:  2007 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 3.919

Review 7.  Brain-computer interface technology as a tool to augment plasticity and outcomes for neurological rehabilitation.

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Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2006-11-09       Impact factor: 5.182

8.  Orthotic Body-Weight Support Through Underactuated Potential Energy Shaping with Contact Constraints.

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Journal:  Proc IEEE Conf Decis Control       Date:  2015-12

9.  Underactuated Potential Energy Shaping with Contact Constraints: Application to a Powered Knee-Ankle Orthosis.

Authors:  Ge Lv; Robert D Gregg
Journal:  IEEE Trans Control Syst Technol       Date:  2017-01-17       Impact factor: 5.485

Review 10.  Fatigue versus activity-dependent fatigability in patients with central or peripheral motor impairments.

Authors:  Bruce H Dobkin
Journal:  Neurorehabil Neural Repair       Date:  2008 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 3.919

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