There will be a long term effects of action observation therapy and mirror therapy on upper limb functional outcomes after subacute stroke.
However, no study is conducted to check the retention rate of both therapies. My study will check the retention rate of these interventions in stroke. If we are able to know long lasting effects of this particular regime, we can incorporate this cost-effective intervention into our clinical setups for stroke rehabilitation.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
44
The patients in the AOT group will be required to observe the upper limb movements or functional actions in video clips and to execute what they had observed to the best of their ability.
The patients will be seated in front of a mirror box placed at their midsagittal plane to perform the movements. The affected arm of the participants was placed inside of the mirror box, and the unaffected arm was infront ofthe mirror.
Mid city Hospital Gujrat
Gujrat, Punjab Province, Pakistan
Fugel Meyer assessment of upper limb
A three-point ordinal scale is used to measure impairments of volitional movement with grades ranging from 0 (item cannot be performed) to 2 (item can be fully performed). Specific descriptions for performance accompany individual test items. Subtests exist for UE function, LE function, balance, sensation, ROM, and pain. The cumulative test score for all components is 226 with availability of specific subtest scores (e.g., UE maximum score is 66, LE score 34; balance score 14). This instrument has good construct validity and high reliability (r =0.99) for determining motor function and balance. Quantifiable outcome data allow this instrument to be accurately used for research purposes (a gold standard) and document recovery over time. The instrument requires an estimated 30 to 40 minutes to administer.
Time frame: 4,5,6,7,8 week
Functional Independence Measure
The FIM instrumentIncludes measures of independence for self-care, including sphincter control, transfers, locomotion, communication, and social cognition. Is an 18-item, seven-level, ordinal scale intended to be sensitive to changes over the course of a comprehensive inpatient medical rehabilitation program.
Time frame: 4,5,6,7,8 week
Short form of the Stroke Impact Scale (SF-SIS)
The eight items determined from the SIS 3.0 for the SF-SIS by MacIsaac et al.For this reason, we refrained from a renewed process of translation and intercultural adaptation of these eight questions. As with the SIS 2.0, the rating is based on a 5-point Likert scale (1-5 points). The raw sum score of the eight questions with a range from 8 to 40 points is converted into an interval-scaled total index of 0-100 points, the SF-SIS index. Higher scores indicate a better quality of life.
Time frame: 4,5,6,7,8 week
Wolf motor function test
The Wolf Motor Function Test (WMFT) quantifies upper extremity movement ability through timed single- or multiple-joint motions and functional tasks.1 The tasks are arranged in order of complexity, progress from proximal to distal joint involvement, test total extremity movement and movement speed, and require few tools and minimal training for test execution. The present study establishes the reliability and validity of the WMFT (Assessing Wolf Motor Function Test as Outcome Measure for Research in Patients After Stroke.) The original version consisted of 21 items; the widely used version of the WMFT consists of 17 items Composed of 3 parts: * Time * Functional ability * Strength
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Time frame: 4,5,6,7,8 week