The SPIRIT study is interventional, national, prospective, open, multicentric each patient being his/her own control. It is conducted to assess the safety and performance of the Atalante exoskeleton system in patients presenting a non-traumatic acute-subacute hemiplegia. The primary endpoint is defined by the patient's ability to perform the 10 MWT with the Atalante system. The study will include at least 12 patients and takes place in three french rehabilitation centers.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
14
A session includes a stand-up, walks over a distance of 10 meters, exercises with or without the assistance of the exoskeleton, U-turns and a sitting.
Centre Jacques Calvé - Fondation Hopale
Berck, France
Centre de Médecine Physique et de Réadaptation de Pionsat
Pionsat, France
Centre mutualiste de Rééducation et de Réadaptation de Kerpape
Ploemeur, France
Evaluate the use of the Atalante system in patients with non-traumatic acute-subacute hemiplegia over several sessions with a 10 meter Walk Test. This test will show the incidence of test success and emergence of adverse events.
Defined by the patient's ability to perform the 10mWT with the Atalante system.
Time frame: At study mid-term, 6 days in average
Evaluate the use of the Atalante system in patients with non-traumatic acute-subacute hemiplegia over several sessions with a 10 meter Walk Test. This test will show the incidence of test success and emergence of adverse events.
Defined by the patient's ability to perform the 10mWT with the Atalante system
Time frame: At study mid-term, 7 days in average
Evaluate the use of the Atalante system in patients with non-traumatic acute-subacute hemiplegia over several sessions with a 10 meter Walk Test. This test will show the incidence of test success and emergence of adverse events.
Defined by the patient's ability to perform the 10mWT with the Atalante system
Time frame: At study mid-term, 8 days in average
Evaluate the use of the Atalante system in patients with non-traumatic acute-subacute hemiplegia over several sessions with a 10 meter Walk Test. This test will show the incidence of test success and emergence of adverse events.
Defined by the patient's ability to perform the 10mWT with the Atalante system
Time frame: At study completion, 9 days in average
Evaluate the use of the Atalante system in patients with non-traumatic acute-subacute hemiplegia over several sessions with a 10 meter Walk Test. This test will show the incidence of test success and emergence of adverse events.
Defined by the patient's ability to perform the 10mWT with the Atalante system
Time frame: At study completion, 10 days in average
Evaluate the patient's ambulatory ability without the Atalante exoskeleton with the Functional Ambulation Classification (FAC).
Evaluation of the walk performance with the FAC classification. 0: Nonfunctional ambulation 1. Ambulator-Dependent for Physical Assistance Level II 2. Ambulator-Dependent for Physical Assistance Level I 3. Ambulator-Dependent for Supervision 4. Ambulator-Independent Level Surfaces only 5. Ambulator-Independent
Time frame: At baseline, day 0 and at study completion, up to 10 days
Evaluate the settings of the walking parameters of the exoskeleton deemed most efficient by the patient (step length, cadence)
During sessions 2 to 5, the physiotherapist will vary the step length and cadence of the exoskeleton's walk. Each parameter will be tested over a distance of 10 meters. Perceived exertion and perceived safety will be assessed by the patient using a Likert Scale. Physiotherapist satisfaction (evaluated on a Likert Scale) will be assessed at the end of the test. Likert scale : 1. "Strongly disagree" 2. "Disagree" 3. "Neither agree or disagree" 4. "Agree" 5. "Strongly agree"
Time frame: Day 2 until study mid term, day 5
Evaluate the assistive control settings
The test of dynamic assistance is performed in WALK mode. The patient starts by leaning the right side (or left side). Then, as soon as the user presses WALK button, a first step is triggered by the exoskeleton. Next steps are more or less assisted depending on the level of assistance chosen by the physiotherapist (100% of assistance equals 0% effort of the patient, Atalante performs the movement instead of the patient). The patient must initiate each step by pushing on the opposite leg and making a pelvic rotation towards the forward foot. Values of tested assistance levels assessed will be collected as perceived exertion, perceived safety and physiotherapist satisfaction (evaluated on a Likert Scale). Likert scale : 1. "strongly disagree" 2. "disagree" 3. "neither agree or disagree" 4. "agree" 5. "strongly agree",
Time frame: Day 2, day 4
Evaluate the patient's ability to perform weight transfer on the hemiplegic side or the healthy side
Success/ Failure to the exercise: transfer of weight to the right or left side until the sound signal is triggered
Time frame: Day 2, day 4
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Evaluate the patient's ability to perform a semi-squat
Success/ Failure to the exercise: perform a semi-squat
Time frame: Day 3, day 5
Evaluate the level of assistance needed by the patient from the healthcare staff to perform tests
The therapist will record the level(s) of assistance needed to perform each test and detail the moment on which assistance was needed during the test. The level of assistance will be determined with the number of times the therapist will have helped the patient during the tests, as well as the type of assistance he/she will have provided. The physiotherapist will select on a scale the level of assistance he/she provided during the test: * None (0% of assistance) * Minimal (0-25% assistance) * Moderate (25-50% assistance) * High (50-75% assistance) * Maximum (75-100% assistance).
Time frame: Throughout study completion, an average of 10 days
Evaluate the time needed for the patient to don and doff
Collection of data regarding the time needed for patient to donning and doff
Time frame: At study completion, day 10
Evaluate the patient's physical and cognitive conditions using the Berg Balance Scale
The Berg Balance Scale (BBS) is a 14-item objective measure that assesses static balance and risk of fall in adult. In this 14-item scale, patient must maintain positions and complete moving tasks of varying difficulty. In most items, patient must maintain a given position for a specified time. Patient receives a score from 0-4 on his/her ability to meet these balance dimensions: * 0-20 on the BBS represents balance impairment; * 21-40 on the BBS represents acceptable balance; * 41-56 on the BBS represents good balance. This measure will be performed during sessions 0 and 10 in order to assess a potential variation
Time frame: At baseline, day 0 and at study completion, up to 10 days
Evaluate the patient's physical and cognitive conditions
Evaluation of the level of aphasia by the aphasia severity rating scale from the Boston Diagnostic Aphasia Examination. The degree of aphasia will be evaluated using the aphasia severity rating scale from the Boston diagnostic Aphasia Examination (BDAE). BDAE is designed to diagnose aphasia and related disorders. This test evaluates the various conceptual modalities (auditory, visual and gestural), the processing functions (comprehension, analysis, problem solving) and the response modalities (writing, articulation and manipulation). The aphasia severity rating scale from the BDAE will be done at baseline in order to describe the population participating in the study.
Time frame: At baseline, day 0
Evaluate the level of effort perceived during each test by using the Borg scale
Rating of perceived exertion (RPE) will be used to assess the effort perceived by patient at each session. RPE is a widely used and reliable indicator to monitor and guide exercise intensity. The scale allows individuals to subjectively rate their level of exertion during exercise or exercise testing. The revised category-ratio scale (0 to 10 scale) is used: 0 Null 1. Very easy 2. Somewhat easy- 3. Moderate 4. Somewhat hard 5. Hard 7 Very hard 8 9 10 Very, very hard
Time frame: Throughout study completion, an average of 10 days
Evaluate the level of security perceived during each test by using a 5-level Likert scale
Perceived safety during tests will be assessed by each patient using a 5-point Likert scale format ranging from 5)"strongly agree", 4)"agree", 3)"neither agree or disagree", 2)"disagree" and 1)"strongly disagree". The range of Likert scale captures the intensity of his/her feeling for a given item.
Time frame: Throughout study completion, an average of 10 days
Evaluate the level of anxiety of patient related to the use of the exoskeleton
Collection of the patient's level of anxiety assessed by a 5-level Likert scale: 1. "strongly disagree" 2. "disagree" 3. "neither agree or disagree", 4. "agree", 5. "strongly agree",
Time frame: At study start, day 1 and at study completion, up to 10 days
Evaluate the emergence of musculoskeletal disorders in the therapist
Evaluation of musculoskeletal disorders developed by healthcare professionals in the use of exoskeleton with a Nordic style questionnaire. The Nordic Musculoskeletal Questionnaire (NMQ) is a 2-section questionnaire. The aim was to develop and test a standardized questionnaire methodology allowing comparison of low back, neck, shoulder and general complaints. The NMQ can be used as a questionnaire or as a structured interview.
Time frame: At baseline, day 0 and at study completion, up to 10 days