Journal
CLINICAL REHABILITATION
Volume 26, Issue 9, Pages 807-816Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0269215511432355
Keywords
Ischaemic brain stroke; shoulder joint subluxation; shoulder-hand syndrome; painful shoulder; neurological rehabilitation
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Funding
- Sporlastic GmbH, Nurtingen, Germany
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Objective: To examine whether the use of a shoulder joint functional orthosis over four weeks can mitigate the development or progression of the shoulder-hand syndrome in patients with shoulder joint subluxation after stroke. Design: Two-armed randomized controlled trial. Setting: Rehabilitation unit of a neurological hospital, single centre. Subjects: Forty-one patients with caudal subluxation of the glenohumeral joint and hemiparesis of the upper extremity after ischaemic brain stroke. Interventions: Support by functional orthosis Neuro-Lux (Sporlastic, Nurtingen, Germany) on top of usual care according to current guidelines (experimental, n = 20) versus usual care alone (control, n = 21). Main measures: Weekly shoulder-hand syndrome scores (severity of clinical symptoms ranging from 0 to 14), discomfort caused by the orthosis, and its usage rate. The primary outcome was the average shoulder-hand syndrome score on days 14, 21 and 28, adjusted for the baseline shoulder-hand syndrome score. Results: The adjusted mean shoulder-hand syndrome score was lower by 3.1 in the intervention compared to the control subjects (95% confidence interval 1.9 to 4.3, P < 0.0001). Marginal or no discomfort from treatment with the orthosis was reported in 15 patients (75%), and only a single patient (5%) felt severe discomfort during the entire treatment. Use of the orthosis during the prescribed time was 89%. Conclusions: The orthosis examined in this trial has been successfully shown to reduce and prevent the development of clinical symptoms of shoulder-hand syndrome. Timing and duration of application of the orthosis as well as its combination with other therapeutic measures should be investigated in future clinical trials.
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