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Rehabilitation Program Dedicated to Post-stroke Lateropulsion Including Exoskeleton Assisted Exercises
Sponsor: University Hospital, Grenoble
Summary
Lateropulsion is a deficit in the body orientation with respect to the vertical in the coronal plane, defined by the presence of one of the three signs: lateral body tilt, active pushing from the sound limbs, and resistance to passive corrections. The lateral body tilt is the cardinal sign, the frequency of the 2 other signs increasing with lateropulsion severity (most dramatic forms called pusher syndrome in the past). Lateropulsion is frequent after stroke, and represents the main factor underpinning balance and gait disorders at the subacute phase. After hemisphere stroke lateropulsion is caused by a bias in the internal model of the verticality in the frontal plane, individuals unconsciously aligning their body posture on a tilted verticality representation. Pilot studies suggested the possibility to recalibrate the internal model of verticality, biased by stroke, and to improve individuals' uprightness. The investigators expect that a specific rehabilitation program combining technics devoted to lateropulsion, and comprising exoskeleton (Atalante) assisted balance exercises could help recalibrate the internal model of verticality and alleviate lateropulsion. The primary objective is to test the hypothesis that a 3-week specific lateropulsion rehabilitation program (15 sessions of 30 minutes including exoskeleton and a rehabilitation focused on the vertical body orientation in the frontal plane) improves the visual vertical (VV), the most used test to assess verticality perception.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 84 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
3
Start Date
2025-06-20
Completion Date
2026-09-30
Last Updated
2025-06-17
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
specific lateropulsion rehabilitation program (exoskeleton + specific physiotherapy orientation rehabilitation)
5 times a week during 30 minutes sessions = 15 Physiotherapy sessions, focused on the active vertical body orientation in the frontal plane and comprising exoskeleton-assisted balance and gait exercises. \+ 5 times a week during 30 minutes sessions = 15 conventional physiotherapy without exercises dedicated to lateropulsion or verticality representation alleviation The intervention description is more extensive in the study description section
Conventional physiotherapy without without exercises dedicated to lateropulsion or verticality representation alleviation
10 times a week, during 30-minutes
Locations (2)
Grenoble University Hospital
Échirolles, France
Grenoble University Hospital
Grenoble, France