
A new study shows that stroke type does not affect outcomes in robotic-assisted gait therapy. Both haemorrhagic and ischemic stroke patients achieve significant improvements in walking ability with multimodal rehabilitation. Learn more about the results.

Contrary to the general opinion of many specialists, i.e. that haemorrhagic stroke survivors have better functional prognoses than ischemic stroke survivors, recent studies reveal that ischemic stroke survivors could experience comparable or even greater functional improvements. Until recently, however, there were no findings on the influence of the stroke subtype on gait and posture results after robotic-assisted gait training. Frédéric Dierick from Haute Ecole Louvain en Hainaut, Belgium, and his co-authors have reported on this in an article entitled “Haemorrhagic versus ischemic stroke: Who can best benefit from blended conventional physiotherapy with robotic-assisted gait therapy?”
In their study, the researchers compared gait and posture results of haemorrhagic and ischemic stroke patients, all of whom received a 4-week treatment programme in which a conventional bottom-up physiotherapy approach was combined with exoskeleton top-down robotic gait training (RAGT).
A total of 40 hemiparetic stroke patients were recruited: 20 patients in the state after haemorrhagic stroke and 20 patients in the state after ischemic stroke (see figure on the right). The two study groups were matched with regard to age, gender, side of the hemiparesis, as well as the severity of the stroke and resulting locomotor impairments. Researchers measured functional improvement using the Functional Ambulation Categories, the Tinetti test, the 6-minute walking test, the Timed Up and Go (TUG), and the 10-metre walking test. All assessments were performed at the beginning and after a four-week intervention phase. The functional gains were then calculated and evaluated for all tests (see figure below).

Significant improvements were observed in both the haemorrhagic and ischemic groups of stroke patients in the Functional Ambulation Categories (P < 0.001 and P = 0.008), the 6-minute walking test (P = 0.003 and P = 0.015), and the 10-metre walking test (P = 0.001 and P = 0.024). There were also significant improvements in the timed Up and Go test in the group of ischemic stroke patients.
Overall, both groups demonstrated similar functional improvements. This led the authors to conclude in their publication that both groups benefit equally from the gait rehabilitation programme. The use of intensive care plans, which combine top-down physiotherapy and bottom-up robotic approaches, seems promising for poststroke rehabilitation – irrespective of the etiology of the insult.
Rather, it seems to be the functional deficits that determine the outcome of rehabilitation after stroke.

Patients who are unable to walk after stroke, whatever the cause of their illness, should receive robotic-assisted gait training in a multimodal therapy setting. The use of a gait trainer can minimise the risk of a gait disorder, and even prevent persistent impaired mobility.

- Dierick F, Dehas M, Isambert J-L, Injeyan S, Bouché A-F, Bleyenheuft Y et al. (2017) Hemorrhagic versus ischemic stroke: Who can best benefit from blended conventional physiotherapy with robotic-assisted gait therapy? PLoS ONE 12(6): e0178636.
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