Physical activity based on daily step-count in inpatient setting in stroke and traumatic brain injury patients in subacute stage: a cross-sectional observational study.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_EBB49BDD338C
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Physical activity based on daily step-count in inpatient setting in stroke and traumatic brain injury patients in subacute stage: a cross-sectional observational study.
Journal
NeuroRehabilitation
Author(s)
Mischler B., Hilfiker R., Hund-Georgiadis M., Maguire C.
ISSN
1878-6448 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1053-8135
Publication state
Published
Issued date
04/2023
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
52
Number
3
Pages
435-450
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Observational Study ; Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Daily step-count is important post-insult in the subacute phase to influence neuroplasticity, functional recovery and as a predictive factor for activity level one-year post event.
Measure daily step-count in subacute patients follow-ing brain injury in an inpatient neurorehabilitation setting and compare these to evi-dence-based recommendations.
30 participants measured of daily step-count over a seven-day period, throughout the day to assess when and how activity varied. Step-counts were analyzed in sub-groups based on walking ability using the Functional Ambulation Categories (FAC). Correlations between steps-count and FAC level, walking speed, light touch, joint position sense, cognition, and fear of falling were calculated.
Median (IQR) daily steps for all patients was 2512 (568.5,4070.5). Not independently walkers took 336 (5-705), the value is below the recommendation. Participants walking with assistance took 700 (31-3080), significantly below recommended value (p = 0.002), independent walkers took 4093 (2327-5868) daily steps, significantly below recommended value (p = < 0.001). Step-count showed moderate to high and statistically-significant correlations: positive for walking speed, joint position sense, negative for fear of falling, and number of medications.
Only 10% of all participants reached the recommended daily steps. Interdisciplinary team-work and strategies to increase daily activity between therapies may be crucial to achieve recommended step-levels in subacute inpatient settings.
Keywords
Humans, Inpatients, Accidental Falls, Fear, Exercise, Walking, Stroke, Brain Injuries, Traumatic, Neurorehabilitation, stepcount, steps, stroke, traumatic brain injury
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
11/04/2023 11:21
Last modification date
21/10/2023 7:07
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