Comparative Effectiveness Research of Dual-task and Single-task Balance Training in People With Stroke

Authors
Category Primary study
Registry of Trialsclinicaltrials.gov
Year 2016
The objective of this study is to investigate the effect of dual-task training at impairment, disability, and participation levels for stroke survivors and investigate possible factors affecting cognitive-motor interference (CMI) under dual-task conditions. Specifically, we will compare the immediate and retention effects of dual-task balance training and single-task balance training on CMI, balance confidence, fall rate, functional performance, and quality of life in individuals with stroke (Aim 1). The second aim of this study is to explore how lateralization, stroke chronicity, task type, and task difficulty may influence patterns of CMI (Aim 2). The third aim of this study is to investigate whether dual-task balance assessments are more sensitive than single-balance assessment in distinguishing stroke fallers from stroke non-fallers (Aim 3).
Epistemonikos ID: fb73c1bf6b26d0073dddb1c1e58705cba49bfb54
First added on: May 12, 2024