Neurorehabilitation Through Hippotherapy of a Brain Stroke

NCT04759326 · Status: RECRUITING · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 52

Last updated 2024-07-31

No results posted yet for this study

Summary

Cerebrovascular accident \[CVA\] (medical term for stroke) is a high burden worldwide disorder and the second leading cause of disability. As illustrated by the number of survivors that remain disabled after a CVA (2 out of 3 according to the US National Stroke Association), recovery is limited, and novel neurorehabilitation approaches are urgently needed. Hippotherapy is an emerging specialized rehabilitation approach, performed by accredited health professionals on a specially trained horse via its movement. A body of scientific evidence has gradually emerged in recent years, showing robust benefits of hippotherapy in various massive neurological disabling conditions including brain stroke.

The aim of the study is to analyze the effect of a hippotherapy program of several cycles delivered during 22 weeks in total, on the functional and global evolution of post-stroke patients (with a score of Rankin ≥ 3 at inclusion) during the outpatient rehabilitation phase. A second purpose is to measure the impact of the intervention on the quality of life of their close caregivers.

A prospective clinical trial on the effectiveness of hippotherapy versus conventional outpatient rehabilitation alone will be carried out. The 22-weeks program includes three cycles of hippotherapy as follows: an initial 2-weeks cycle, an intermediate 1-week cycle and a final 1-week cycle. One-hour daily sessions will be conducted during each cycle exclusive additional rehabilitation care. After each cycle, the patients will have a 9-weeks rest period where they will continue their conventional therapy. A battery of clinical tests will measure both functional and psychological outcome. The primary end point will be the functional independence of the patient. The secondary end points will consider the patient's sensorimotor and cognitive function, the severity of stroke and the quality of life, as well as the caregivers' burden and quality of life.

Program evaluation is important in neurorehabilitation to ensure that patients are achieving meaningful outcomes from the care. A primary question is how do stroke patients clinically evolve after being discharged from the hospital and how stable is the achieved rehabilitation outcome. Hippotherapy optimizes brain plasticity and has a strong impact on the global rehabilitation process and functional outcome of these patients. A remaining question concerns the improvement of the caregivers' quality of life.

Conditions

  • Cerebrovascular Accident
  • Neurorehabilitation
  • Neuroplasticity
  • Hippotherapy
  • Silent Neurofunctional Barriers
  • Functional Deficit
  • Cognitive Deficit
  • Psychological Trauma
  • Autonomy
  • Quality of Life
  • Caregiver Burnout

Interventions

OTHER

Hippotherapy

Hippotherapy is an emerging specialized rehabilitation approach, performed on a specially trained horse via its movement at a walk by accredited health professionals (e.g., physicians, psychologists, physical therapists, occupational therapists, psychomotor therapists, chiropractors ...). The horse is an excellent support for temporary or consolidated disabilities, providing key elements of recovery for impairment, activity limitation, and participation restriction. It is a dynamic activity where the amplitude of movement of the patient's body transmitted by the horse is similar to the human walking (micro-movements of postural muscles). Moreover, through multimodal inputs (sensory, exteroceptive, proprioceptive, interoceptive), hippotherapy has a direct action on the individual's motor capacities and cognitive abilities. The degree of change relying on neuroplasticity is linked both to the relevance of the activity and to the intensity and frequency of the elements that constitute it.

OTHER

Conventional Neurorehabilitation

The neurorehabilitation therapy is an intervention from two or more disciplines (physiotherapy, occupational therapy, social work, psychology and other related disciplines, nursing) prescribed by a medical specialist (neurologist, neurosurgeon, oncologist, physiatrist). It is designed to be patient-centered, time-limited and functionally oriented, and aims to maximize activity and participation (social inclusion) using a biopsychosocial model.

Sponsors & Collaborators

  • Boehringer Ingelheim

    collaborator INDUSTRY
  • Centre Hospitalier Sud Francilien

    collaborator OTHER
  • Centre Hospitalier de Béziers

    collaborator UNKNOWN
  • University Hospital, Grenoble

    collaborator OTHER
  • Alliance Equiphoria

    lead OTHER

Principal Investigators

  • Manuel Gaviria, MD, PhD · Alliance Equiphoria

  • Hélène Viruega, ESMHL · Alliance Equiphoria - Institut Equiphoria

Study Design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Model
PARALLEL

Eligibility

Min Age
18 Years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No

Timeline & Regulatory

Start
2022-04-27
Primary Completion
2025-11-30
Completion
2026-03-31

Countries

  • France

Study Locations

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Entities

Read the full study record

This page highlights key information. For complete eligibility criteria, study locations, investigator contacts, and the full protocol, visit the original record on ClinicalTrials.gov.

View NCT04759326 on ClinicalTrials.gov