Physiotherapy - Research Publications

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    Mood and Cognitive Trajectories Over the First Year after Mild Ischemic Stroke
    Ebaid, D ; Bird, LJ ; McCambridge, LJE ; Werden, E ; Bradshaw, J ; Cumming, T ; Tang, E ; Brodtmann, A (ELSEVIER, 2022-04)
    OBJECTIVES: Cognitive and mood dysfunction are major contributors to post-stroke disability. The longer-term trajectories of mood and cognition post-stroke remain unclear, as do which cognitive domains decline, improve, or remain stable after stroke, and in which patients. We aimed to characterize the cognitive trajectories of mild ischemic stroke survivors over one year compared to stroke-free controls, and to investigate whether symptoms of anxiety and depression were associated with cognitive function. MATERIALS AND METHODS: All participants were tested with a neuropsychological test battery at 3-months and 12-months post-stroke, assessing attention/processing speed, memory, visuospatial function, executive function, and language. Anxiety and depression symptomatology were also assessed at both timepoints. RESULTS: Stroke participants (N=126, mean age 68.44 years ±11.83, 87 males, median [Q1, Q3] admission NIHSS=2 [1, 4]) performed worse on cognitive tests and endorsed significantly higher depression and anxiety symptomatology than controls (N=40, mean age=68.82 years ±6.33, 25 males) at both timepoints. Mood scores were not correlated with cognitive performance. Stroke participants' scores trended higher across cognitive domains from 3- to 12-months but statistically significant improvement was only observed on executive function tasks. CONCLUSION: Stroke participants performed significantly worse than controls on all cognitive domains following mild ischemic stroke. Stroke participants only exhibited statistically significant improvement on executive function tasks between 3- and 12- months. Whilst anxiety and depression symptoms were higher in stroke participants, this was not correlated with cognitive performance. Further studies are needed to understand factors underlying cognitive recovery and decline after stroke.
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    Validity of Multisensor Array for Measuring Energy Expenditure of an Activity Bout in Early Stroke Survivors
    Kramer, SF ; Johnson, L ; Bernhardt, J ; Cumming, T (HINDAWI LTD, 2018)
    Introduction. Stroke survivors use more energy than healthy people during activities such as walking, which has consequences for the way exercise is prescribed for stroke survivors. There is a need for wearable device that can validly measure energy expenditure (EE) of activity to inform exercise prescription early after stroke. We aimed to determine the validity and reliability of the SenseWear-Armband (SWA) to measure EE and step-counts during activity <1 month after stroke. Materials and Methods. EE was measured using the SWA and metabolic cart and steps-counts were measured using the SWA and direct observation. Based on walking ability, participants performed 2x six-minute walks or repeated sit-to-stands. Concurrent validity and test-retest reliability were determined by calculating intraclass and concordance correlation coefficients. Results and Discussion. Thirteen participants walked; nine performed sit-to-stands. Validity of the SWA measuring EE for both activities was poor (ICC/CCC < 0.40). The SWA overestimates EE during walking and underestimated EE during sit-to-stands. Test-retest agreement showed an ICC/CCC of <0.40 and >0.75 for walking and sit-to-stand, respectively. However, agreement levels changed with increasing EE levels (i.e., proportional bias). The SWA did not accurately measure step-counts. Conclusion. The SWA should be used with caution to measure EE of activity of mild to moderate stroke survivors <1 month after stroke.
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    Longitudinal evaluation of cognition after stroke - A systematic scoping review
    Saa, JP ; Tse, T ; Baum, C ; Cumming, T ; Josman, N ; Rose, M ; Carey, L ; Quinn, TJ (PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE, 2019-08-29)
    BACKGROUND: Cognitive impairment affects up to 80 percent of the stroke population, however, both the available evidence about post-stroke cognition and the measures used to evaluate it longitudinally have not been well described. The aims of this systematic scoping review were: to identify and characterize studies evaluating cognition longitudinally after stroke; to summarize the cognitive instruments used and the domains they target; and to organize cognitive domains assessed using the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF). METHODS: We used a systematic scoping approach to search for peer-reviewed articles involving adults with stroke that evaluated cognition longitudinally. Screening of titles, abstracts, and full reports was completed independently by two reviewers, across six electronic databases (PubMed, PsycInfo, Medline, Cinahl Plus, Embase, and Web of Science). Cognitive domains were mapped to an ICF function independently by the same two reviewers, using a previously tested, standardized approach. RESULTS: A total of 5,540 records were found; 257 were included, representing a total pooled sample of 120,860 stroke survivors. Of these studies, 200 (78%) provided specific cognitive outcomes from the longitudinal evaluations, 57 (22%) reported model predictions, and 77 (30%) included interventions. Cognition was evaluated with 356 unique instruments, targeting 95 distinct cognitive domains, and 17 mental functions from the ICF. The Mini-Mental State Examination was the most frequently used instrument (117 reports, 46%). Other tools used longitudinally were the Trail Making Test (17% of reports), tests of verbal fluency (14%), the Functional Independence Measure (14%), the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (13%), the Digit Span (11%), and the Stroop test (10%). Global cognition was evaluated in 170 reports (66%), followed by higher-level cognitive functioning (29%), memory (28%), language (21%), attention (21%), and perceptual skills (14%). Studies using functional (or performance-based) cognitive assessments over time were scarce (< 1%). CONCLUSION: Our findings indicate that whilst there is a substantial number of studies available that report longitudinal evaluations of cognition after stroke, there is large variability in the measures used and the cognitive domains they target. Nonetheless, the available data for evaluation of cognition over time after stroke can be organized and described systematically.
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    How are early post-stroke exercise interventions developed? A systematic review
    Kramer, S ; Kaffenberger, T ; Cumming, T ; Bernhardt, J ; Johnson, L (SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD, 2018-08)