Abstract

BackgroundExercise capacity is seriously reduced after stroke. While cardiopulmonary assessment and intervention strategies have been validated for the mildly and moderately impaired populations post-stroke, there is a lack of effective concepts for stroke survivors suffering from severe motor limitations. This study investigated the test-retest reliability and repeatability of cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) using feedback-controlled robotics-assisted treadmill exercise (FC-RATE) in severely motor impaired individuals early after stroke.Methods20 subjects (age 44–84 years, <6 month post-stroke) with severe motor limitations (Functional Ambulatory Classification 0–2) were selected for consecutive constant load testing (CLT) and incremental exercise testing (IET) within a powered exoskeleton, synchronised with a treadmill and a body weight support system. A manual human-in-the-loop feedback system was used to guide individual work rate levels. Outcome variables focussed on standard cardiopulmonary performance parameters. Relative and absolute test-retest reliability were assessed by intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC), standard error of the measurement (SEM), and minimal detectable change (MDC). Mean difference, limits of agreement, and coefficient of variation (CoV) were estimated to assess repeatability.ResultsPeak performance parameters during IET yielded good to excellent relative reliability: absolute peak oxygen uptake (ICC =0.82), relative peak oxygen uptake (ICC =0.72), peak work rate (ICC =0.91), peak heart rate (ICC =0.80), absolute gas exchange threshold (ICC =0.91), relative gas exchange threshold (ICC =0.88), oxygen cost of work (ICC =0.87), oxygen pulse at peak oxygen uptake (ICC =0.92), ventilation rate versus carbon dioxide output slope (ICC =0.78). For these variables, SEM was 4-13%, MDC 12-36%, and CoV 0.10-0.36. CLT revealed high mean differences and insufficient test-retest reliability for all variables studied.ConclusionsThis study presents first evidence on reliability and repeatability for CPET in severely motor impaired individuals early after stroke using a feedback-controlled robotics-assisted treadmill. The results demonstrate good to excellent test-retest reliability and appropriate repeatability for the most important peak cardiopulmonary performance parameters. These findings have important implications for the design and implementation of cardiovascular exercise interventions in severely impaired populations. Future research needs to develop advanced control strategies to enable the true limit of functional exercise capacity to be reached and to further assess test-retest reliability and repeatability in larger samples.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1743-0003-11-145) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Exercise capacity is seriously reduced after stroke

  • It has been shown that peak oxygen uptake (VO2peak) is approximately 50% lower compared to normative values of healthy adults 30 days post-stroke [3,4]

  • Subjects were excluded if they had (1) cardiac contraindications for exercise testing according to the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) [40], (2) contraindications for robotics-assisted treadmill exercise (RATE) according to guidelines from the manufacturer (Hocoma AG, Volketswil, Switzerland), (3) concurrent neurological disease (e.g. Multiple Sclerosis, Parkinson’s Disease, etc.), (4) concurrent pulmonary disease (e.g. COPD, etc.), (5) history of dementia

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Summary

Introduction

Exercise capacity is seriously reduced after stroke. While cardiopulmonary assessment and intervention strategies have been validated for the mildly and moderately impaired populations post-stroke, there is a lack of effective concepts for stroke survivors suffering from severe motor limitations. This study investigated the test-retest reliability and repeatability of cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) using feedback-controlled robotics-assisted treadmill exercise (FC-RATE) in severely motor impaired individuals early after stroke. Exercise capacity and activity status have become wellestablished predictors of cardiovascular and overall mortality, both of which are seriously reduced after stroke [1,2]. Despite extensive inpatient rehabilitation procedures and spontaneous recovery of cardiovascular fitness, the exercise capacity of stroke survivors entering the chronic phase remains below recommended levels [5]. Effective assessment and intervention strategies are needed to assess, monitor, and improve cardiovascular fitness early after stroke

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