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DOI: 10.1177/0269215506071281 © 2007 SAGE Publications Repetitive locomotor training and physiotherapy improve walking and basic activities of daily living after stroke: a single-blind, randomized multicentre trial (DEutsche GAngtrainerStudie, DEGAS)Klinik Bavaria, Neurological Rehabilitation, Kreischa, Germany
Klinik Berlin, Department of Neurological Rehabilitation, Charité University Hospital, Berlin, Germany
Asklepioskliniken Schildautal, Clinic for Neurological Rehabilitation and Early Rehabilitation, Seesen, Germany
Medical Park Bad Rodach, Bad Rodach, J Mehrholz Klinik Bavaria, Neurological Rehabilitation, Kreischa, Germany
Asklepioskliniken Schildautal, Clinic for Neurological Rehabilitation and Early Rehabilitation, Seesen, Germany
Medical Park Bad Rodach, Bad Rodach, Germany
Institute for Medical Informatics and Biometrics of the Technical University Dresden, Germany
Klinik Berlin, Department of Neurological Rehabilitation, Charité University Hospital, Berlin, Germany Objective: To evaluate the effect of repetitive locomotor training on an electromechanical gait trainer plus physiotherapy in subacute stroke patients. Design: Randomized controlled trial. Setting: Four German neurological rehabilitation centres. Subjects: One hundred and fifty-five non-ambulatory patients (first-time stroke <60 days). Intervention: Group A received 20 min locomotor training and 25 min physiotherapy; group B had 45 min physiotherapy every week day for four weeks.
Main outcome measures: Primary variables were gait ability (Functional Ambulation Category, 0-5) and the Barthel Index (0-100), blindly assessed at study onset, end, and six months later for follow-up. Responders to the therapy had to become ambulatory (Functional Ambulation Category 4 or 5) or reach a Barthel Index of
Results: The intention-to-treat analysis revealed that significantly greater number of patients in group A could walk independently: 41 of 77 versus 17 of 78 in group B (P B < 0.0001) at treatment end. Also, significantly more group A patients had reached a Barthel Index Conclusions: Intensive locomotor training plus physiotherapy resulted in a significantly better gait ability and daily living competence in subacute stroke patients compared with physiotherapy alone.
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75. Secondary variables were walking velocity, endurance, mobility and leg power. 
