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Journal Article

Citation

Bunn LM, Marsden JF, Giunti P, Day BL. Clin. Rehabil. 2014; 29(2): 143-153.

Affiliation

Sobell Department of Motor Neuroscience and Movement Disorders, UCL Institute of Neurology, London, UK.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0269215514539336

PMID

25082955

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the feasibility of a randomized controlled trial of a home-based balance intervention for people with cerebellar ataxia.

DESIGN: A randomized controlled trial design. SETTING: Intervention and assessment took place in the home environment. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 12 people with spinocerebellar ataxia type 6 were randomized into a therapy or control group. Both groups received identical assessments at baseline, four and eight weeks. INTERVENTIONS: Therapy group participants undertook balance exercises in front of optokinetic stimuli during weeks 4-8, while control group participants received no intervention. MAIN MEASURES: Test-retest reliability was analysed from outcome measures collected twice at baseline and four weeks later. Feasibility issues were evaluated using daily diaries and end trial exit interviews.

RESULTS: The home-based training intervention with opto-kinetic stimuli was feasible for people with pure ataxia, with one drop-out. Test-retest reliability is strong (intraclass correlation coefficient >0.7) for selected outcome measures evaluating balance at impairment and activity levels. Some measures reveal trends towards improvement for those in the therapy group. Sample size estimations indicate that Bal-SARA scores could detect a clinically significant change of 0.8 points in this functional balance score if 80 people per group were analysed in future trials.

CONCLUSIONS: Home-based targeted training of functional balance for people with pure cerebellar ataxia is feasible and the outcome measures employed are reliable.


Language: en

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