Neuroarchitectural Recovery Model of Post-stroke Patients

NCT06825598 · Status: ENROLLING_BY_INVITATION · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 100

Last updated 2025-02-14

No results posted yet for this study

Summary

The societal burden of stroke patients with persistent neurological deficit is high. It is therefore imperative that the mechanisms of rehabilitation-induced motor recovery be better understood in the hopes of developing more efficacious rehabilitative therapy.

The treatment outcomes of people with stroke after rehabilitation vary, with up to 60% of people having residual impairment of the upper limb function. The high variability in rehabilitation-induced recovery prompted researchers and clinicians to develop more efficacious rehabilitative interventions for functional regain in post-stroke patients. However, the mechanisms underlying post-stroke functional regain have not been well articulated. The majority of studies in this area placed a limited scope on associating improvement in functions with changes in the activation of the motor cortices, ranging from normalization to the overactivity of the motor regions. A wider scope, however, needs to include structural changes in the motor cortices, as well as functional and structural changes in other neural substrates, as other non-motor cortices underpin stroke recovery.

The results of our pilot study on acute post-stroke patients indicate that both functional and structural brain connections are significantly associated with motor recovery after conventional post-stroke rehabilitation. In addition to sensorimotor cortices, the investigators also found other non-motor areas, such as the superior frontal gyrus and the precuneus, that play important roles in post-stroke rehabilitation-induced recovery.

Given the gap in elusive neural processes and in the mechanisms underlying rehabilitation-induced recovery, this proposed study is aimed at providing a better understanding of the functional regain of post-stroke patients by constructing a brain recovery model. As a first attempt, the investigators propose building a basic recovery model based on patients who will undergo constraint-induced movement therapy, a popular evidence-based post-stroke intervention, for capturing training-induced neuroplastic changes. Two groups of chronic stroke patients will be recruited, respectively, for the treatment and control groups. Magnetic resonance imaging (used to map functional and structural brain connections), the clinical assessments of motor impairments, and activities of daily living will be conducted at four time points-namely at the baseline, one week, four weeks, and three months after the treatment commences. The two objectives set for the proposed study are: (1) to characterize the longitudinal changes in functional and structural brain networks, which would differentiate the rate of changes in these networks; and (2) to define the functional and the structural brain network coupling, as well as their contributions to the daily function regain.

Conditions

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Constraint-induced movement therapy

Constraint-induced movement therapy is a therapy for post-stroke patients to improve their motor functions

DIAGNOSTIC_TEST

Magnetic resonance imaging

Magnetic resonance imaging is performed to monitor the changes in the brain of post-stroke patients along the course of intervention

Sponsors & Collaborators

  • The Hong Kong Polytechnic University

    collaborator OTHER
  • Chinese University of Hong Kong

    lead OTHER

Principal Investigators

  • Sai Kam Hui, Ph.D. · Chinese University of Hong Kong

Study Design

Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Model
SINGLE_GROUP

Eligibility

Min Age
50 Years
Max Age
80 Years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No

Timeline & Regulatory

Start
2024-12-01
Primary Completion
2026-12-31
Completion
2026-12-31

Countries

  • Hong Kong

Study Locations

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Entities

Diseases

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 NCT06825598 on ClinicalTrials.gov