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Short-Term Effects of Focal Muscle Vibration on Motor Recovery After Acute Stroke: A Pilot Randomized Sham-Controlled Study

Repetitive focal muscle vibration (rMV) is known to promote neural plasticity and long-lasting motor recovery in chronic stroke patients. Those structural and functional changes within the motor network underlying motor recovery occur in the very first hours after stroke. Nonetheless, to our knowled...

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Autores principales: Toscano, Massimiliano, Celletti, Claudia, Viganò, Alessandro, Altarocca, Alberto, Giuliani, Giada, Jannini, Tommaso B., Mastria, Giulio, Ruggiero, Marco, Maestrini, Ilaria, Vicenzini, Edoardo, Altieri, Marta, Camerota, Filippo, Di Piero, Vittorio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6401608/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30873102
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2019.00115
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author Toscano, Massimiliano
Celletti, Claudia
Viganò, Alessandro
Altarocca, Alberto
Giuliani, Giada
Jannini, Tommaso B.
Mastria, Giulio
Ruggiero, Marco
Maestrini, Ilaria
Vicenzini, Edoardo
Altieri, Marta
Camerota, Filippo
Di Piero, Vittorio
author_facet Toscano, Massimiliano
Celletti, Claudia
Viganò, Alessandro
Altarocca, Alberto
Giuliani, Giada
Jannini, Tommaso B.
Mastria, Giulio
Ruggiero, Marco
Maestrini, Ilaria
Vicenzini, Edoardo
Altieri, Marta
Camerota, Filippo
Di Piero, Vittorio
author_sort Toscano, Massimiliano
collection PubMed
description Repetitive focal muscle vibration (rMV) is known to promote neural plasticity and long-lasting motor recovery in chronic stroke patients. Those structural and functional changes within the motor network underlying motor recovery occur in the very first hours after stroke. Nonetheless, to our knowledge, no rMV-based studies have been carried out in acute stroke patients so far, and the clinical benefit of rMV in this phase of stroke is yet to be determined. The aim of this randomized double-blind sham-controlled study is to investigate the short-term effect of rMV on motor recovery in acute stroke patients. Out of 22 acute stroke patients, 10 were treated with the rMV (vibration group–VG), while 12 underwent the sham treatment (control group–CG). Both treatments were carried out for 3 consecutive days, starting within 72 h of stroke onset; each daily session consisted of three 10-min treatments (for each treated limb), interspersed with a 1-min interval. rMV was delivered using a specific device (Cro®System, NEMOCO srl, Italy). The transducer was applied perpendicular to the target muscle's belly, near its distal tendon insertion, generating a 0.2–0.5 mm peak-to-peak sinusoidal displacement at a frequency of 100 Hz. All participants also underwent a daily standard rehabilitation program. The study protocol underwent local ethics committee approval (ClinicalTrial.gov NCT03697525) and written informed consent was obtained from all of the participants. With regard to the different pre-treatment clinical statuses, VG patients showed significant clinical improvement with respect to CG-treated patients among the NIHSS (p < 0.001), Fugl-Meyer (p = 0.001), and Motricity Index (p < 0.001) scores. In addition, when the upper and lower limb scales scores were compared between the two groups, VG patients were found to have a better clinical improvement at all the clinical end points. This study provides the first evidence that rMV is able to improve the motor outcome in a cohort of acute stroke patients, regardless of the pretreatment clinical status. Being a safe and well-tolerated intervention, which is easy to perform at the bedside, rMV may represent a valid complementary non-pharmacological therapy to promote motor recovery in acute stroke patients.
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spelling pubmed-64016082019-03-14 Short-Term Effects of Focal Muscle Vibration on Motor Recovery After Acute Stroke: A Pilot Randomized Sham-Controlled Study Toscano, Massimiliano Celletti, Claudia Viganò, Alessandro Altarocca, Alberto Giuliani, Giada Jannini, Tommaso B. Mastria, Giulio Ruggiero, Marco Maestrini, Ilaria Vicenzini, Edoardo Altieri, Marta Camerota, Filippo Di Piero, Vittorio Front Neurol Neurology Repetitive focal muscle vibration (rMV) is known to promote neural plasticity and long-lasting motor recovery in chronic stroke patients. Those structural and functional changes within the motor network underlying motor recovery occur in the very first hours after stroke. Nonetheless, to our knowledge, no rMV-based studies have been carried out in acute stroke patients so far, and the clinical benefit of rMV in this phase of stroke is yet to be determined. The aim of this randomized double-blind sham-controlled study is to investigate the short-term effect of rMV on motor recovery in acute stroke patients. Out of 22 acute stroke patients, 10 were treated with the rMV (vibration group–VG), while 12 underwent the sham treatment (control group–CG). Both treatments were carried out for 3 consecutive days, starting within 72 h of stroke onset; each daily session consisted of three 10-min treatments (for each treated limb), interspersed with a 1-min interval. rMV was delivered using a specific device (Cro®System, NEMOCO srl, Italy). The transducer was applied perpendicular to the target muscle's belly, near its distal tendon insertion, generating a 0.2–0.5 mm peak-to-peak sinusoidal displacement at a frequency of 100 Hz. All participants also underwent a daily standard rehabilitation program. The study protocol underwent local ethics committee approval (ClinicalTrial.gov NCT03697525) and written informed consent was obtained from all of the participants. With regard to the different pre-treatment clinical statuses, VG patients showed significant clinical improvement with respect to CG-treated patients among the NIHSS (p < 0.001), Fugl-Meyer (p = 0.001), and Motricity Index (p < 0.001) scores. In addition, when the upper and lower limb scales scores were compared between the two groups, VG patients were found to have a better clinical improvement at all the clinical end points. This study provides the first evidence that rMV is able to improve the motor outcome in a cohort of acute stroke patients, regardless of the pretreatment clinical status. Being a safe and well-tolerated intervention, which is easy to perform at the bedside, rMV may represent a valid complementary non-pharmacological therapy to promote motor recovery in acute stroke patients. Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-02-19 /pmc/articles/PMC6401608/ /pubmed/30873102 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2019.00115 Text en Copyright © 2019 Toscano, Celletti, Viganò, Altarocca, Giuliani, Jannini, Mastria, Ruggiero, Maestrini, Vicenzini, Altieri, Camerota and Di Piero. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Neurology
Toscano, Massimiliano
Celletti, Claudia
Viganò, Alessandro
Altarocca, Alberto
Giuliani, Giada
Jannini, Tommaso B.
Mastria, Giulio
Ruggiero, Marco
Maestrini, Ilaria
Vicenzini, Edoardo
Altieri, Marta
Camerota, Filippo
Di Piero, Vittorio
Short-Term Effects of Focal Muscle Vibration on Motor Recovery After Acute Stroke: A Pilot Randomized Sham-Controlled Study
title Short-Term Effects of Focal Muscle Vibration on Motor Recovery After Acute Stroke: A Pilot Randomized Sham-Controlled Study
title_full Short-Term Effects of Focal Muscle Vibration on Motor Recovery After Acute Stroke: A Pilot Randomized Sham-Controlled Study
title_fullStr Short-Term Effects of Focal Muscle Vibration on Motor Recovery After Acute Stroke: A Pilot Randomized Sham-Controlled Study
title_full_unstemmed Short-Term Effects of Focal Muscle Vibration on Motor Recovery After Acute Stroke: A Pilot Randomized Sham-Controlled Study
title_short Short-Term Effects of Focal Muscle Vibration on Motor Recovery After Acute Stroke: A Pilot Randomized Sham-Controlled Study
title_sort short-term effects of focal muscle vibration on motor recovery after acute stroke: a pilot randomized sham-controlled study
topic Neurology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6401608/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30873102
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2019.00115
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