Affiliation:
1. University of Sheffield
2. Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
3. Coventry University
4. Barnsley Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
Abstract
Abstract
Introduction
Post stroke elbow spasticity (PSES) affects over a third of individuals following stroke and negatively impacts on functional recovery, comfort and quality of life. Drug therapies have limited efficacy and unwanted side effects, botulinum toxin, although effective, is costly, and conventional electrical stimulation therapies are limited long term by habituation. We aim to investigate the efficacy of Sheffield Adaptive Patterned Electrical Stimulation (SHAPES), that delivers temporally and spatially varying pattern of electrical stimulation, against transcutaneous electrical stimulation (TENS) and standard care at reducing PSES.
Methods and design
Overall, 297 people with PSES will be randomised (1:1:1) to one of 3 arms: Standard care (no electrical stimulation), TENS (conventional patterned electrical stimulation) or SHAPES (adaptive patterned electrical stimulation). Both SHAPES and TENS are delivered using a specially designed electrical stimulation sleeve used for 60 minutes each day for 6-weeks. Outcome measures are completed at baseline, end of treatment (EOT 6 weeks) and then 6-weeks, 12-weeks and 24-weeks after the end of treatment. Efficacy will be determined based on the proportion of participants experiencing meaningful improvement (18%) in the 7-day Numerical Rating Scale (NRS-S) for PSES, compared between both intervention arms and standard care, and between the two intervention groups. Measures of arm motor function (Action Research Arm Test, MRC scale), and quality of life (SQoL-6D, EQ-5D) will also be measured along with a parallel health economic evaluation.
Discussion
The results of the SHAPES trial will inform management of elbow spasticity after stroke. The SHAPES intervention is a low cost, self-administered intervention for the management of spasticity that can be used repeatedly, and if found to be more effective than TENS or control has the potential to be widely implemented in the UK NHS healthcare setting. Furthermore, despite the wide use of TENS in the management of spasticity, this study will provide critically required evidence regarding its efficacy.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC
Reference25 articles.
1. Estimated societal costs of stroke in the UK based on a discrete event simulation;Patel A;Age Ageing,2019
2. The future incidence, prevalence and costs of stroke in the UK;King D;Age Ageing,2020
3. Outcome and time course of recovery in stroke. Part I: outcome. The Copenhagen stroke study;Jørgensen H;Arch Phys Med Rehabil,1995
4. The control of muscle tone, reflexes, and movement: Robert Wartenberg Lecture;Lance JW;Neurology,1980
5. Prevalence of disabling spasticity 1 year after first-ever stroke;Lundström E;Eur J Neurol,2008