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Neurorehabilitation through Hippotherapy on Neurofunctional Sequels of Stroke: Effect on Patients’ Functional Independence, Sensorimotor/Cognitive Capacities and Quality of Life, and the Quality of Life of Their Caregivers—A Study Protocol

Background: Stroke is a high burden illness and the second leading cause of worldwide disability with generally poor recovery rates. Robust benefits of hippotherapy, a novel neurorehabilitation approach, in functional recovery following various severe neurological disabling conditions has been shown...

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Autores principales: Viruega, Hélène, Imbernon, Carole, Chausson, Nicolas, Altarcha, Tony, Aghasaryan, Manvel, Soumah, Djibril, Lescieux, Edwige, Flamand-Roze, Constance, Simon, Olivier, Bedin, Arnaud, Smadja, Didier, Gaviria, Manuel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9139443/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35625006
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12050619
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author Viruega, Hélène
Imbernon, Carole
Chausson, Nicolas
Altarcha, Tony
Aghasaryan, Manvel
Soumah, Djibril
Lescieux, Edwige
Flamand-Roze, Constance
Simon, Olivier
Bedin, Arnaud
Smadja, Didier
Gaviria, Manuel
author_facet Viruega, Hélène
Imbernon, Carole
Chausson, Nicolas
Altarcha, Tony
Aghasaryan, Manvel
Soumah, Djibril
Lescieux, Edwige
Flamand-Roze, Constance
Simon, Olivier
Bedin, Arnaud
Smadja, Didier
Gaviria, Manuel
author_sort Viruega, Hélène
collection PubMed
description Background: Stroke is a high burden illness and the second leading cause of worldwide disability with generally poor recovery rates. Robust benefits of hippotherapy, a novel neurorehabilitation approach, in functional recovery following various severe neurological disabling conditions has been shown. In the present study, we will analyze the effect of a hippotherapy program on the outcome of post-stroke patients in the first year post-stroke. Method: A randomized controlled clinical trial on the effectiveness of hippotherapy (4 weeks/18 weeks hippotherapy/conventional neurorehabilitation) versus conventional neurorehabilitation alone (22 weeks) will be conducted over 48 weeks. In the treated group, one-hour daily hippotherapy sessions will be exclusively conducted during the hippotherapy’s cycles, alternated with periods of conventional neurorehabilitation. A test battery will measure both the functional and psychological outcomes. The primary endpoint will be the patient’s functional independence. The secondary endpoints will measure the sensorimotor function, autonomy, and quality of life, as well as the caregivers’ quality of life. Results and conclusion: Individual brain connectome, life history and personality construct influence the brain’s functional connectivity and are central to developing optimal tailored neurorehabilitation strategies. According to our current practice, hippotherapy allows the enhancement of substantial neuroplastic changes in the injured brain with significant neurological recovery. The protocol aims to confirm those issues. Trial registration in ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04759326 accessed on 19 February 2021.
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spelling pubmed-91394432022-05-28 Neurorehabilitation through Hippotherapy on Neurofunctional Sequels of Stroke: Effect on Patients’ Functional Independence, Sensorimotor/Cognitive Capacities and Quality of Life, and the Quality of Life of Their Caregivers—A Study Protocol Viruega, Hélène Imbernon, Carole Chausson, Nicolas Altarcha, Tony Aghasaryan, Manvel Soumah, Djibril Lescieux, Edwige Flamand-Roze, Constance Simon, Olivier Bedin, Arnaud Smadja, Didier Gaviria, Manuel Brain Sci Protocol Background: Stroke is a high burden illness and the second leading cause of worldwide disability with generally poor recovery rates. Robust benefits of hippotherapy, a novel neurorehabilitation approach, in functional recovery following various severe neurological disabling conditions has been shown. In the present study, we will analyze the effect of a hippotherapy program on the outcome of post-stroke patients in the first year post-stroke. Method: A randomized controlled clinical trial on the effectiveness of hippotherapy (4 weeks/18 weeks hippotherapy/conventional neurorehabilitation) versus conventional neurorehabilitation alone (22 weeks) will be conducted over 48 weeks. In the treated group, one-hour daily hippotherapy sessions will be exclusively conducted during the hippotherapy’s cycles, alternated with periods of conventional neurorehabilitation. A test battery will measure both the functional and psychological outcomes. The primary endpoint will be the patient’s functional independence. The secondary endpoints will measure the sensorimotor function, autonomy, and quality of life, as well as the caregivers’ quality of life. Results and conclusion: Individual brain connectome, life history and personality construct influence the brain’s functional connectivity and are central to developing optimal tailored neurorehabilitation strategies. According to our current practice, hippotherapy allows the enhancement of substantial neuroplastic changes in the injured brain with significant neurological recovery. The protocol aims to confirm those issues. Trial registration in ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04759326 accessed on 19 February 2021. MDPI 2022-05-09 /pmc/articles/PMC9139443/ /pubmed/35625006 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12050619 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Protocol
Viruega, Hélène
Imbernon, Carole
Chausson, Nicolas
Altarcha, Tony
Aghasaryan, Manvel
Soumah, Djibril
Lescieux, Edwige
Flamand-Roze, Constance
Simon, Olivier
Bedin, Arnaud
Smadja, Didier
Gaviria, Manuel
Neurorehabilitation through Hippotherapy on Neurofunctional Sequels of Stroke: Effect on Patients’ Functional Independence, Sensorimotor/Cognitive Capacities and Quality of Life, and the Quality of Life of Their Caregivers—A Study Protocol
title Neurorehabilitation through Hippotherapy on Neurofunctional Sequels of Stroke: Effect on Patients’ Functional Independence, Sensorimotor/Cognitive Capacities and Quality of Life, and the Quality of Life of Their Caregivers—A Study Protocol
title_full Neurorehabilitation through Hippotherapy on Neurofunctional Sequels of Stroke: Effect on Patients’ Functional Independence, Sensorimotor/Cognitive Capacities and Quality of Life, and the Quality of Life of Their Caregivers—A Study Protocol
title_fullStr Neurorehabilitation through Hippotherapy on Neurofunctional Sequels of Stroke: Effect on Patients’ Functional Independence, Sensorimotor/Cognitive Capacities and Quality of Life, and the Quality of Life of Their Caregivers—A Study Protocol
title_full_unstemmed Neurorehabilitation through Hippotherapy on Neurofunctional Sequels of Stroke: Effect on Patients’ Functional Independence, Sensorimotor/Cognitive Capacities and Quality of Life, and the Quality of Life of Their Caregivers—A Study Protocol
title_short Neurorehabilitation through Hippotherapy on Neurofunctional Sequels of Stroke: Effect on Patients’ Functional Independence, Sensorimotor/Cognitive Capacities and Quality of Life, and the Quality of Life of Their Caregivers—A Study Protocol
title_sort neurorehabilitation through hippotherapy on neurofunctional sequels of stroke: effect on patients’ functional independence, sensorimotor/cognitive capacities and quality of life, and the quality of life of their caregivers—a study protocol
topic Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9139443/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35625006
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/brainsci12050619
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