Journal article

The efficacy of SMART Arm training early after stroke for stroke survivors with severe upper limb disability: A protocol for a randomised controlled trial

SG Brauer, KS Hayward, RG Carson, AG Cresswell, RN Barker

BMC Neurology | BMC | Published : 2013

Abstract

Background: Recovery of upper limb function after stroke is poor. The acute to subacute phase after stroke is the optimal time window to promote the recovery of upper limb function. The dose and content of training provided conventionally during this phase is however, unlikely to be adequate to drive functional recovery, especially in the presence of severe motor disability. The current study concerns an approach to address this shortcoming, through evaluation of the SMART Arm, a non-robotic device that enables intensive and repetitive practice of reaching by stroke survivors with severe upper limb disability, with the aim of improving upper limb function. The outcomes of SMART Arm training ..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

This study has been funded by a National Health & Medical Research Council Project Grant (ID: 511241). The authors thank the staff at the Princess Alexandra Hospital and the QEII Hospital. We also thank Dr Stephen Wilson, Dr David Lloyd and Mr Russell Gee for their contribution to SMART Arm construction; Dr David Lloyd, Dr Craig Tokono, and Dr Christoph Szubski for their contribution to data collection equipment design and construction; and Dr Brenda Ocampo and Ms Katrina Kemp for their contribution to project management.