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Postural and gait disorders in subacute stroke patients: Lateropulsion is the key

Authors :
Dominic Pérennou
Nicolas Leroux
Anne Chrispin
Shenhao Dai
Patrice Davoine
Bastien Moineau
Marie Jaeger
Anaïs Odin
Emmanuelle Clarac
Céline Piscicelli
Andrea Kistner
Source :
Annals of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine. 61:e24
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2018.

Abstract

Recent researches suggested that postural disorders after stroke may be partly caused by a wrong referential of verticality, expressed by a lateropulsion behavior. The role played by lateropulsion in the postural and gait disorders after stroke remained to be investigated, which was the objective of the present study. Retrospective cohort study (2012–2017) of 147 consecutive patients investigated in a neurorehabilitation ward in average at 32.7 days after a first hemispheric stroke: age 62.8 ± 12.6 years, 41 females, 120 with infarction, 57 with right lesion. Trained physiotherapists assessed: lateropulsion with the Scale for Contraversive Pushing (SCP, 0-6), Balance disorders with the Postural Assessment Scale for Stroke (PASS, 0-36) and gait disorders with Lindmark Scale (0–6). Brain imaging was carefully checked (138 MRI, 9 CT). Patients with a malignant stroke, dementia, instable medical status that could interfere with balance and gait recovery, or those who refused the assessments were not included. Descriptive data are given in the form median (first-third quartile). One month poststroke, postural and gait data were: SCP 0 (0–0.25), PASS 32 (25–35) and Gait score 4 (2–6). Fifteen patients were pushers (10%), among them 80% had a right hemisphere stroke. A first result was to confirm that lateropulsion was more severe in right hemisphere stroke than in left (right 46% vs. left 10%, χ2 =47.7; P

Details

ISSN :
18770657
Volume :
61
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c3bcde2df05791dd1de18404961b43d5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rehab.2018.05.053