1. Virtual Reality for Motor and Cognitive Rehabilitation From Clinic to Home: A Pilot Feasibility and Efficacy Study for Persons With Chronic Stroke
- Author
-
Jonsdottir, Johanna, Baglio, Francesca, Gindri, Patrizia, Isernia, Sara, Castiglioni, Carlotta, Gramigna, Cristina, Palumbo, Giovanna, Pagliari, Chiara, Di Tella, Sonia, Perini, Gloria, Bowman, Thoma, Salza, Marco, Molteni, Franco, Isernia, Sara (ORCID:0000-0002-0849-3984), Di Tella, Sonia (ORCID:0000-0002-2248-5120), Jonsdottir, Johanna, Baglio, Francesca, Gindri, Patrizia, Isernia, Sara, Castiglioni, Carlotta, Gramigna, Cristina, Palumbo, Giovanna, Pagliari, Chiara, Di Tella, Sonia, Perini, Gloria, Bowman, Thoma, Salza, Marco, Molteni, Franco, Isernia, Sara (ORCID:0000-0002-0849-3984), and Di Tella, Sonia (ORCID:0000-0002-2248-5120)
- Abstract
Aims: Continuity of care is an important issue in healthcare for persons after stroke. The present multi-center pilot study investigates the feasibility and efficiency of an innovative approach, the Human Empowerment Aging and Disability (HEAD), for digital-health motor and cognitive rehabilitation. The approach is explored within an in-clinic context (ClinicHEAD) and in continuity of care (HomeHEAD) for persons after chronic stroke. Methods: Thirty-four outpatients with chronic stroke (mean age 55 years, SD 13.7) participated. The HEAD VR protocol was administered in two consecutive phases: Phase I in clinic (ClinicHEAD) consisting of 4 weeks of 12 supervised HEAD rehabilitation sessions (45-min), including motor, cognitive and dual task for all participants; Phase II at home (HomeHEAD) consisted of 60 sessions of the same VR activities, 5 times/week for 3 months. All participants in the ClinicHEAD were allocated (ratio 1:2) to continue with tele-monitored home rehabilitation (HH, N = 11) or to follow usual care (UC, N = 23). Blind evaluation was carried out at baseline, after ClinicHEAD, after 3 months of HomeHEAD and at 3 months Follow-up. Primary outcomes were functional mobility [2-min Walking Test (2MWT)] and cognition [Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA)]. Feasibility and acceptance were assessed with adherence to treatment and the System Usability Satisfaction. Within group analyses were done with dependent samples t-tests, and between groups HomeHEAD comparisons were carried out on change scores with independent samples t-test (p = 0.05, two tailed). Results: The HEAD protocol was feasible with good adherence both in the ClinicHEAD phase (92%) and HomeHEAD (89%) phase, along with good perceived system satisfaction. ClinicHEAD resulted in a significant increase in functional mobility (2MWT, p = 0.02) and cognition (MoCA, p = 0.003) and most secondary outcome variables. At 3 months follow up of HomeHEAD the HH_group showed a further significantly greater mai
- Published
- 2021