European Stroke Organisation (ESO) guideline on motor rehabilitation.

IF 5.8 3区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Margit Alt Murphy, Maria Munoz-Novoa, Charlotte Heremans, Meret Branscheidt, Rosa Cabanas-Valdés, Stefan T Engelter, Christina Kruuse, Gert Kwakkel, Sandra Lakičević, Sofia Lampropoulou, Andreas R Luft, Philippe Marque, Sarah A Moore, Anna Podlasek, Apoorva Malavalli Shankaranarayana, Lisa Shaw, John M Solomon, Cathy Stinear, Eva Swinnen, Andrea Turolla, Geert Verheyden
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Abstract

Motor rehabilitation aims to help people after stroke to gain optimal motor functioning, independence and quality of life. This European Stroke Organisation (ESO) guideline provides updated, evidence-based support for clinical practice in six agreed critical areas: dose for upper limb and gait therapy, high-intensity gait training, effect of therapy transfer package, group versus individual therapy and sit-to-stand training. The guideline was developed according to ESO standard operating procedures and Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE). Expert consensus statements are provided where a GRADE recommendation cannot be made due to insufficient evidence. For therapy dose, very low quality evidence supports a weak recommendation to provide an additional minimal dose of 20 h of repetitive upper limb practice to improve arm capacity. For gait, expert consensus suggests that an additional minimal dose of 20 h of walking practice could be beneficial for walking capacity. For high-intensity gait training, moderate quality evidence supports a strong recommendation for high-intensity gait training to improve walking endurance in people with chronic stroke and stable cardiovascular status, while low quality evidence supports a weak recommendation for improving walking speed. An expert consensus suggests using a transfer package when providing upper limb task-specific training to enhance transfer to daily life. For group therapy, a weak recommendation based on very low quality evidence suggests that task-specific group-based therapy is non-inferior to individual therapy for improving balance, gait speed and walking endurance. A weak recommendation based on moderate quality evidence suggests additional sit-to-stand training to improve balance.

欧洲中风组织(ESO)运动康复指南。
运动康复旨在帮助中风患者获得最佳的运动功能、独立性和生活质量。欧洲卒中组织(ESO)指南在六个商定的关键领域为临床实践提供了最新的、基于证据的支持:上肢和步态治疗的剂量、高强度步态训练、治疗转移包的效果、团体与个人治疗和坐立训练。该指引是根据ESO的标准作业程序和建议、评估、发展和评价分级(GRADE)制定的。由于证据不足而不能提出GRADE推荐时,提供专家共识声明。对于治疗剂量,非常低质量的证据支持一个微弱的建议,即提供额外的最小剂量20小时的上肢重复练习,以提高手臂的能力。对于步态,专家一致认为额外最小剂量的20小时步行练习可能有利于步行能力。对于高强度的步态训练,中等质量的证据支持强烈推荐高强度的步态训练,以提高慢性卒中患者和心血管状态稳定的人的步行耐力,而低质量的证据支持弱推荐提高步行速度。专家一致建议在提供上肢特定任务训练时使用转移包,以增强对日常生活的转移。对于团体治疗,基于非常低质量证据的弱推荐表明,特定任务的团体治疗在改善平衡、步态速度和步行耐力方面并不亚于个体治疗。一个基于中等质量证据的弱建议是额外的坐立训练来改善平衡。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.50
自引率
6.60%
发文量
102
期刊介绍: Launched in 2016 the European Stroke Journal (ESJ) is the official journal of the European Stroke Organisation (ESO), a professional non-profit organization with over 1,400 individual members, and affiliations to numerous related national and international societies. ESJ covers clinical stroke research from all fields, including clinical trials, epidemiology, primary and secondary prevention, diagnosis, acute and post-acute management, guidelines, translation of experimental findings into clinical practice, rehabilitation, organisation of stroke care, and societal impact. It is open to authors from all relevant medical and health professions. Article types include review articles, original research, protocols, guidelines, editorials and letters to the Editor. Through ESJ, authors and researchers have gained a new platform for the rapid and professional publication of peer reviewed scientific material of the highest standards; publication in ESJ is highly competitive. The journal and its editorial team has developed excellent cooperation with sister organisations such as the World Stroke Organisation and the International Journal of Stroke, and the American Heart Organization/American Stroke Association and the journal Stroke. ESJ is fully peer-reviewed and is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE). Issues are published 4 times a year (March, June, September and December) and articles are published OnlineFirst prior to issue publication.
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