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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT07650500
NA

Stroke Rehabilitation Through Intensive Exercise

Sponsor: The Swedish School of Sport and Health Sciences

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn whether combining moderate to high intensity aerobic exercise with constraint-induced movement therapy (CI therapy) can improve walking ability in adults who have had a stroke. The study will also learn if telerehabilitation at home can support long-term recovery after intensive rehabilitation. The main questions this study aims to answer are: * Does moderate to high intensity aerobic exercise before CI therapy improve walking ability, balance and lower extremity function in people with long-lasting gait difficulties after stroke? * Does CI therapy alone lead to similar or different improvements in walking ability, balance or lower extremity function? * Does telerehabilitation help participants maintain or further improve their function after the intensive rehabilitation period? Researchers will compare two groups. One group will receive 4 weeks of CI therapy, 5 days per week, plus 20 minutes of moderate-to-high-intensity aerobic exercise before the rehabilitation session on 3 of these days, and the other group will receive 4 weeks of CI therapy, 5 days per week, without preparatory aerobic exercise. After the completion of CI therapy, all participants will be offered an individualized 8-week telerehabilitation program to follow at home. They will use a mobile application to report physical activity and follow instructions for telerehabilitation. All participants will complete two assessment visits (about 3 hours each), 1-2 weeks before and 1-2 weeks after CI therapy. They will also complete questionnaires electronically after the telerehabilitation program. Daily activity will be measured twice during the study: once during a week after the intensive rehabilitation and once during a week after the telerehabilitation program. A small movement sensor worn on the thigh will be used. The sensor is attached with a soft strap or an adhesive patch and is comfortable to wear all day. The sensor shows how much a person walks, stands, or sits in everyday life. It is light, does not disturb normal activities, and only collects movement information for the study. An instruction sheet will be included to make it easy to use.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 70 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

50

Start Date

2026-08-01

Completion Date

2029-06-30

Last Updated

2026-06-16

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

LE-mCIMT-EXE

LE-mCIMT-EXE (Lower Extremity Modified Constraint-Induced Movement Therapy + Moderate-to-High Intensity Aerobic Exercise) This intervention consists of a structured 4-week program of lower-extremity modified constraint-induced movement therapy (LE-mCIMT), delivered 5 days per week in an intensive rehabilitation setting. The program focuses on task-specific, repetitive, and progressively challenging lower-limb activities designed to improve gait function, balance, and mobility. What distinguishes this intervention from standard LE-mCIMT is the addition of a 20-minute bout of moderate-to-high intensity aerobic exercise performed immediately before therapy on three days each week. Aerobic exercise will be conducted on a recumbent stepper or ergometer cycle, with continuous heart-rate monitoring and ratings of perceived exertion. Following the 4-week intervention, all participants will receive 8 weeks of individualized telerehabilitation.

BEHAVIORAL

LE- mCIMT-TAU

LE-mCIMT-TAU (Lower Extremity Modified Constraint-Induced Movement Therapy) This intervention consists of a 4-week program of lower-extremity modified constraint-induced movement therapy (LE-mCIMT), delivered 5 days per week under the same therapeutic schedule and conditions as the experimental arm. Participants engage in intensive, task-specific training targeting lower-limb motor control, balance, and gait function. The therapeutic content, duration, therapist supervision, and overall structure mirror the experimental group to ensure comparability. The key distinction is that this arm does not include the 20-minute session of moderate-to-high intensity aerobic exercise prior to therapy. By withholding the exercise-priming component, this arm serves as an active comparator, allowing the study to isolate the addition effects of aerobic exercise on rehabilitation outcomes. Participants will receive 8 weeks of individualized telerehabilitation following completion of the 4-week LE-mCIMT.