Effects of Training with a Powered Exoskeleton on Cortical Activity Modulation in Hemiparetic Chronic Stroke Patients: A Randomized Controlled Pilot Trial.

Journal: Archives Of Physical Medicine And Rehabilitation
Published:
Abstract

Objectives: To investigate the effects of exoskeleton-assisted gait training in stroke patients.

Design: Prospective randomized controlled trial. Setting: Rehabilitation department in a single tertiary hospital. Participants: Thirty (N=30) chronic stroke patients with Functional Ambulatory Category scale (FAC) between 2 and 4. Intervention: Patients were randomly assigned to 1 of 2 groups: training with Healbot G, a wearable powered exoskeleton (Healbot G group; n=15), or treadmill training (control group; n=15). All participants received 30 minutes of training, 10 times per week, for 4 weeks. Outcome measurements: The primary outcome was oxyhemoglobin level changes, representing cortical activity in both motor cortices using functional near-infrared spectroscopy. The secondary outcomes included FAC, Berg Balance Scale, Motricity Index for the lower extremities (MI-Lower), 10-meter walk test, and gait symmetry ratio (spatial step and temporal symmetry ratio).

Results: Compared to the control group, during the entire training session, the pre-training and post-training mean cortical activity, and the amount of increment between pre- and post-training were significantly higher in the Healbot G group (∆mean ± SD; pre-training, 0.245±0.119, post-training, 0.697±0.429, between pre- and post-training, 0.471±0.401μmol, P<.001). There was no significant difference in cortical activity between affected- and unaffected hemispheres after Healbot G training. FAC (∆mean ± SD; 0.35 ± 0.50, P=.012), MI-Lower (∆mean ± SD; 7.01 ± 0.14, P=.001), and spatial step gait symmetry ratio (∆mean ± SD; -0.32 ± 0.25, P=.049) were improved significantly in the Healbot G group.

Conclusion: Exoskeleton-assisted gait training induces cortical modulation effect in both motor cortices, a balanced cortical activation pattern with improvements in spatial step symmetry ratio, walking ability, and voluntary strength.

Authors
Miran Yoo, Min Chun, Ga Hong, Changmin Lee, June Lee, Anna Lee
Relevant Conditions

Stroke