EXERTION: a pilot trial on the effect of aerobic, smartwatch-controlled exercise on stroke recovery: effects on motor function, structural repair, cognition, mental well-being, and the immune system.

Frederike A Straeten, Stephanie van Zyl, Bastian Maus, Jochen Bauer, Heiner Raum, Catharina C Gross, Sabine Bruchmann, Nils C Landmeyer, Cornelius Faber, Jens Minnerup, Antje Schmidt-Pogoda
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Abstract

Introduction: Motor impairments are the objectively most striking sequelae after stroke, but non-motor consequences represent a high burden for stroke survivors as well. Depression is reported in one third of patients, the fatigue prevalence ranges from 23 to 75% due to heterogenous definitions and assessments. Cognitive impairment is found in one third of stroke patients 3-12 months after stroke and the risk for dementia is doubled by the event. Aerobic exercise has been shown to reduce depressive symptoms, counteract fatigue, and improve cognitive functions in non-stroke patients. Furthermore, exercise is known to strengthen the immune system. It is unknown, though, if aerobic exercise can counteract poststroke depression, fatigue, poststroke dementia and poststroke immunosuppression. Therefore, we aim to analyse the effect of aerobic exercise on functional recovery, cognition, emotional well-being, and the immune system. Reorganization of topological networks of the brain shall be visualized by diffusion MRI fibre tracking.

Methods: Adults with mild to moderate stroke impairment (initial NIHSS or NIHSS determined at the moment of maximal deterioration 1-18) are recruited within two weeks of stroke onset. Study participants must be able to walk independently without risk of falling. All patients are equipped with wearable devices (smartwatches) measuring the heart rate and daily step count. The optimal heart rate zone is determined by lactate ergometry at baseline. Patients are randomized to the control or the intervention group, the latter performing a heart rate-controlled walking training on own initiative 5 times a week for 45 min. All patients receive medical care and stroke rehabilitation to the usual standard of care. The following assessments are conducted at baseline and after 90 days: Fugl Meyer-assessment for the upper and lower extremity, 6 min-walk test, neuropsychological assessment (cognition: MoCA, SDMT; fatigue and depression: FSMC, HADS-D, participation: WHODAS 2.0 12-items), blood testing (i.e. immune profiling to obtain insights into phenotype and functional features of distinct immune-cell subsets) and cranial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with grid-sampled diffusion weighted imaging, white matter fibre tracking and MR spectroscopy.

Perspective: This study investigates the effect of smartwatch-controlled aerobic exercise on functional recovery, cognition, emotional well-being, the immune system, and neuronal network reorganization in stroke patients. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT Number: NCT05690165. First posted19 January 2023. Retrospectively registered, https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05690165.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

运动:一项关于有氧、智能手表控制的运动对中风恢复影响的试点试验:对运动功能、结构修复、认知、心理健康和免疫系统的影响。
运动障碍是卒中后最显著的后遗症,但非运动后果对卒中幸存者来说也是一个沉重的负担。据报道,三分之一的患者患有抑郁症,由于定义和评估不同,疲劳患病率从23%到75%不等。三分之一的中风患者在中风后3-12个月出现认知障碍,患痴呆症的风险增加一倍。有氧运动已被证明可以减轻抑郁症状,抵消疲劳,并改善非中风患者的认知功能。此外,众所周知,锻炼可以增强免疫系统。然而,目前尚不清楚有氧运动是否能抵消中风后抑郁、疲劳、中风后痴呆和中风后免疫抑制。因此,我们的目的是分析有氧运动对功能恢复、认知、情绪健康和免疫系统的影响。大脑拓扑网络的重组应通过扩散MRI纤维跟踪可视化。方法:在卒中发作两周内招募有轻度至中度卒中损害的成人(初始NIHSS或NIHSS在最大恶化时刻1-18确定)。研究参与者必须能够独立行走,没有摔倒的风险。所有患者都配备了可穿戴设备(智能手表)来测量心率和每日步数。最佳心率区域由基线时的乳酸几何值决定。患者被随机分为对照组和干预组,干预组每周自主进行心率控制步行训练5次,每次45分钟。所有患者均接受常规标准护理的医疗护理和中风康复。在基线和90天后进行以下评估:Fugl meyer -上肢和下肢评估,6分钟步行测试,神经心理评估(认知:MoCA, SDMT;疲劳和抑郁:FSMC, HADS-D,参与:WHODAS 2.0 12项),血液检测(即免疫谱分析,以了解不同免疫细胞亚群的表型和功能特征)和采用网格采样扩散加权成像的颅磁共振成像(MRI),白质纤维跟踪和MR光谱。视角:本研究探讨智能手表控制的有氧运动对脑卒中患者功能恢复、认知、情绪健康、免疫系统和神经网络重组的影响。临床试验注册ClinicalTrials.gov NCT编号:NCT05690165。首次发布于2023年1月19日。追溯登记,https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05690165。
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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