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1.
J Frailty Sarcopenia Falls ; 4(1): 26-28, 2019 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32300713

ABSTRACT

Stroke is a multidimensional illness as it affects various aspects in a person's quality of life. The rehabilitation team focuses mainly on complications but there seems to be a gap in the education of the patients and their carers in skills relevant to the competencies required for community, aged care, health, housing and disability support services. Stroke patients' and carers' education-training, as well as their satisfaction has not been studied adequately. The current article presents important studies in the field about the association of patients' and carers' satisfaction and based on authors' opinion suggests appropriate interventions in order to improve the health of the patients.

2.
Article in English | WPRIM (Western Pacific) | ID: wpr-224021

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To explore the amount of practice and progression during task-oriented circuit training (TOCT) in chronic stroke survivors; to test the use of pedometers and observation-based measures in detecting step activity; to verify the possible correlation between step activity and locomotor function improvements. METHODS: Six community-dwelling chronic stroke survivors underwent 10 TOCT sessions (2 hours/each) over 2 weeks in which they were trained both on a treadmill and on six task-oriented workstations (W1–W6). During the sessions, they wore a piezoelectric pedometer and step activities were recorded. Outcome measures were as follows: % of activities during which pedometers worked properly; pedometer-based measures (total step counts, treadmill steps, workstation steps—total and W2,W3,W5,W6); observation-based measures (number of repetitions in task W1 and W4); walking speed changes measured by the 10-m walking test (10MWT) and walking endurance changes (6-minute walking test) after TOCT. RESULTS: During TOCT sessions (n=57), activities were recorded through pedometer-based measures in 4 out of the 6 patients. The total amount of step activity was 5,980.05±1,968.39 steps (54.29% in task-oriented workstations, 37.67% on treadmill, and 8.03% during breaks). Exercise progression was highlighted significantly by observational measures (W1, W4). A positive correlation was observed between increased gait speed and observational stair step repetitions progression (W1) (r=0.91, p=0.01) or pedometer-based tandem exercise step progression (W3) (r=0.98, p=0.01). CONCLUSION: TOCT can be considered a high-intensity, progressive intervention to restore locomotor function in chronic stroke survivors. Pedometer-based measures might help in quantifying TOCT's volume of practice; however, further investigations are required.


Subject(s)
Humans , Circuit-Based Exercise , Feasibility Studies , Gait , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Rehabilitation , Stroke , Survivors , Walking
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