The 5-STS is a prognostic factor of sub-acute stroke patients who will not become community walkers at discharge from rehabilitation

Author:

Medina-Mirapeix Francesc1,Crisóstomo María José2,Gacto-Sánchez Mariano1,Escolar-Reina M. Pilar1,Sánchez-Martínez M. Piedad1,Martín-SanAgustín Rodrigo3,García-Vidal José Antonio1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physical Therapy, University of Murcia, Murcia, Spain

2. Department of Rehabilitation, Jerez Hospital, Jerez de la Frontera, Spain

3. Department of Physical Therapy, University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The recovery of community ambulation is a common concern among individuals after stroke. OBJECTIVES: (1) To develop a potential readily applicable prognostic model able to correctly discriminate stroke patients who will not become independent community walkers at discharge; (2) To investigate the effects of early reassessment during the first month of treatment on the prediction accuracy of this model. METHODS: This was a prospective cohort study. A consecutive sample of 80 patients at ≤60 days poststroke were assessed at baseline of outpatient physical rehabilitation and reassessed one month later. Non-functional community ambulation was measured. RESULTS: Seventy-four patients were followed until discharge. Of these, 47 patients were non-functional community walkers at discharge. A prediction model based on baseline performance in the five repetition sit-to-stand [5-STS] test was able to discriminate those patients of the sample (Area-under-curve = 0.956), and again with data from reassessment (AUC = 0.952). A time of 21 s at baseline was a highly prognostic cut-off point for discrimination (sensitivity = 87.2% and 85.1%). The combined use of baseline and reassessment data improved sensitivity (98.1%) CONCLUSION: Early findings of the 5-STS among stroke patients is an independent prognostic factor associated with independent community walking at discharge. It could discriminate individuals who will not become community walkers at discharge.

Publisher

IOS Press

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Rehabilitation,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation

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