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Substrates for Post-Stroke Arm Rehabilitation
Sponsor: Massachusetts General Hospital
Summary
Difficulty moving the arm is very common and a major cause of disability after stroke. Although rehabilitation therapies (i.e., occupational and physical therapy) are the most common treatments used to improve arm motor function, it remains unknown how therapy actually changes brain pathways after stroke. This project seeks to generate fundamental knowledge about brain pathways that allow people to move their arm after stroke and how these pathways change with rehabilitation; we expect this knowledge to translate to new therapies to reduce stroke-related disability. We plan to enroll N = 50 patients with moderate to severe difficulty moving their arm after ischemic or hemorrhage stroke during the subacute period (3 to 6 months post stroke) into either 30 hours over 6 weeks of Arm Basis Training (a protocolized form of occupational therapy targeting motor control) or usual care. We will perform kinematic motor assessments, neuroimaging, and neurophysiology before and after therapy in order to test the hypothesis that intensive, target training improves arm motor control and induces corresponding anatomical and physiological changes of associated brain pathways.
Official title: Defining the Neurological Substrates of Proximal Upper Extremity Motor Control and Recovery After Stroke
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
50
Start Date
2025-10-07
Completion Date
2030-04-30
Last Updated
2026-03-11
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Arm Basis Training
This program is a systematic training regimen specifically designed to improve proximal motor control for patients with severe upper extremity hemiparesis. The core principles of the Arm Basis Training Program focus on rebuilding the fundamental capacity for specific and selective motor control before progressing to more complex motor patterns.
Locations (1)
Laboratory for Translational Neurorecovery, Center for Neurotechnology and Neurorecovery, Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States