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Trajectories of arm recovery early after stroke: an exploratory study using latent class growth analysis

AIM: To investigate trajectories of recovery of motor arm function after stroke during inpatient rehabilitation. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Data were available from 74 consecutively-admitted stroke survivors receiving inpatient rehabilitation from an inception cohort study. Heterogeneity of arm recovery...

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Autores principales: Vratsistas-Curto, Angela, Downie, Aron, McCluskey, Annie, Sherrington, Catherine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Taylor & Francis 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9815231/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36594373
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07853890.2022.2159062
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author Vratsistas-Curto, Angela
Downie, Aron
McCluskey, Annie
Sherrington, Catherine
author_facet Vratsistas-Curto, Angela
Downie, Aron
McCluskey, Annie
Sherrington, Catherine
author_sort Vratsistas-Curto, Angela
collection PubMed
description AIM: To investigate trajectories of recovery of motor arm function after stroke during inpatient rehabilitation. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Data were available from 74 consecutively-admitted stroke survivors receiving inpatient rehabilitation from an inception cohort study. Heterogeneity of arm recovery in the first 4-weeks was investigated using latent class analysis and weekly Box and Block Test (BBT) scores. Optimal number of clusters were determined; characterised and cluster associated factors explored. RESULTS: A 4-cluster model was identified, including 19 participants with low baseline arm function and minimal recovery (‘LOWstart/LOWprogress’, 26%), 15 with moderate function and low recovery (‘MODstart/LOWprogress’, 20%), 15 with low function and high recovery (‘LOWstart/HIGHprogress’, 20%), and 25 with moderate function and recovery (‘MODstart/MODprogress’, 34%). Compared to LOWstart/LOWprogress: LOWstart/HIGHprogress presented earlier post-stroke (β, 95%CI) (−4.81 days, −8.94 to −0.69); MODstart/MODprogress had lower modified Rankin Scale scores (−0.74, −1.15 to −0.32); and MODstart/LOWprogress, LOWstart/HIGHprogress and MODstart/MODprogress had higher admission BBT (23.58, 18.82 to 28.34; 4.85, 0.85 to 9.61; 28.02, 23.82 to 32.21), Upper Limb-Motor Assessment Scale (9.60, 7.24 to 11.97; 3.34, 0.97 to 5.70; 10.86, 8.77 to 12.94), Action Research Arm Test (31.09, 22.86 to 39.33; 12.69, 4.46 to 20.93; 38.01, 30.76 to 45.27), and Manual Muscle Test scores (10.64, 7.07 to 14.21; 6.24, 2.67 to 9.81; 11.87, 8.72 to 15.01). CONCLUSIONS: We found unique patterns of arm recovery with distinct characteristics for each cluster. Better understanding of patterns of arm recovery can guide future models and intervention development. KEY MESSAGES: Arm recovery early after stroke follows four distinct trajectories that relate to time post stroke, initial stroke severity and baseline level of motor arm function. Identification of recovery patterns gives insight into the uniqueness of individual’s recovery. This study offers a novel approach on which to build and develop future models of arm recovery.
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spelling pubmed-98152312023-01-06 Trajectories of arm recovery early after stroke: an exploratory study using latent class growth analysis Vratsistas-Curto, Angela Downie, Aron McCluskey, Annie Sherrington, Catherine Ann Med Neurology AIM: To investigate trajectories of recovery of motor arm function after stroke during inpatient rehabilitation. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Data were available from 74 consecutively-admitted stroke survivors receiving inpatient rehabilitation from an inception cohort study. Heterogeneity of arm recovery in the first 4-weeks was investigated using latent class analysis and weekly Box and Block Test (BBT) scores. Optimal number of clusters were determined; characterised and cluster associated factors explored. RESULTS: A 4-cluster model was identified, including 19 participants with low baseline arm function and minimal recovery (‘LOWstart/LOWprogress’, 26%), 15 with moderate function and low recovery (‘MODstart/LOWprogress’, 20%), 15 with low function and high recovery (‘LOWstart/HIGHprogress’, 20%), and 25 with moderate function and recovery (‘MODstart/MODprogress’, 34%). Compared to LOWstart/LOWprogress: LOWstart/HIGHprogress presented earlier post-stroke (β, 95%CI) (−4.81 days, −8.94 to −0.69); MODstart/MODprogress had lower modified Rankin Scale scores (−0.74, −1.15 to −0.32); and MODstart/LOWprogress, LOWstart/HIGHprogress and MODstart/MODprogress had higher admission BBT (23.58, 18.82 to 28.34; 4.85, 0.85 to 9.61; 28.02, 23.82 to 32.21), Upper Limb-Motor Assessment Scale (9.60, 7.24 to 11.97; 3.34, 0.97 to 5.70; 10.86, 8.77 to 12.94), Action Research Arm Test (31.09, 22.86 to 39.33; 12.69, 4.46 to 20.93; 38.01, 30.76 to 45.27), and Manual Muscle Test scores (10.64, 7.07 to 14.21; 6.24, 2.67 to 9.81; 11.87, 8.72 to 15.01). CONCLUSIONS: We found unique patterns of arm recovery with distinct characteristics for each cluster. Better understanding of patterns of arm recovery can guide future models and intervention development. KEY MESSAGES: Arm recovery early after stroke follows four distinct trajectories that relate to time post stroke, initial stroke severity and baseline level of motor arm function. Identification of recovery patterns gives insight into the uniqueness of individual’s recovery. This study offers a novel approach on which to build and develop future models of arm recovery. Taylor & Francis 2023-01-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9815231/ /pubmed/36594373 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07853890.2022.2159062 Text en © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Neurology
Vratsistas-Curto, Angela
Downie, Aron
McCluskey, Annie
Sherrington, Catherine
Trajectories of arm recovery early after stroke: an exploratory study using latent class growth analysis
title Trajectories of arm recovery early after stroke: an exploratory study using latent class growth analysis
title_full Trajectories of arm recovery early after stroke: an exploratory study using latent class growth analysis
title_fullStr Trajectories of arm recovery early after stroke: an exploratory study using latent class growth analysis
title_full_unstemmed Trajectories of arm recovery early after stroke: an exploratory study using latent class growth analysis
title_short Trajectories of arm recovery early after stroke: an exploratory study using latent class growth analysis
title_sort trajectories of arm recovery early after stroke: an exploratory study using latent class growth analysis
topic Neurology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9815231/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36594373
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07853890.2022.2159062
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