Short-term effects of pedaling exercise combined with integrated volitional control electrical stimulation in an older patient hospitalized for subacute stroke: ABA single-case design

J Phys Ther Sci. 2023 Jan;35(1):82-87. doi: 10.1589/jpts.35.82. Epub 2023 Jan 1.

Abstract

[Purpose] The purpose of this study was to examine effects on gait indices produced by a short-term intervention of pedaling combined with integrated volitional control electric stimulation in an older patient with stroke. [Participant and Methods] This study was a single-case ABA (A-control, B-treatment) design. Each phase lasted four consecutive days (12 days total). Ten minutes of pedaling were performed daily. In Phase B, pedaling was combined with integrated volitional control electric stimulator on the rectus femoris of the affected side. The primary outcomes were the coefficient of variation, a measure of stride time homogeneity during gait; and the root mean square, a measure of trunk sway in the triaxial direction (mediolateral, vertical, anteroposterior) during gait. Assessments were measured before the intervention (day 0) and after the end of each phase (days 4, 8, and 12). [Results] Changes from the previous coefficient of variation were +1.13%, -3.95%, and +0.82% in Phases A, B, and A', respectively, with the greatest improvement occurring after Phase B. The root mean square improved the most with -5.13 for mediolateral after Phase B, -3.33 for vertical, and -6.99 for anteroposterior after Phase A. [Conclusion] A short-term intervention consisting of pedaling combined with integrated volitional control electric stimulation may contribute to the improvement of gait abnormalities.

Keywords: Electrical stimulation; Recumbent cycling; Trunk acceleration.

Publication types

  • Case Reports