Abstract

BackgroundCommunication is one of the most important predictors of social reintegration after stroke. Approximately 15–42% of stroke survivors experience post-stroke aphasia. Helping people recover from aphasia is one of the research priorities after a stroke. Our aim is to develop and validate a new therapy integrating dubbing techniques to improve functional communication.MethodsThe research project is structured as three work packages (WP). WP1: development of the dubbed language cinema-based therapy: Two research assistants (a speech therapist and a dubbing actor) will select the clips, mute specific words/sentences in progressive speech difficulty, and guide patients to dub them across sessions. Words to be dubbed will be those considered to be functionally meaningful by a representative sample of aphasic patients and relatives through an online survey. WP2: a randomized, crossover, interventional pilot study with the inclusion of 54 patients with post-stroke non-fluent aphasia. Patients will be treated individually in 40-min sessions twice per week for 8 weeks. Primary outcomes will be significant pre/post differences in scores in the Communicative Activity Log (CAL) questionnaire and Boston Diagnostic Aphasia Examination (BDAE) administered by a psychologist blinded to the patients’ clinical characteristics. Secondary outcomes: General Health Questionnaire (GHQ)-12, Stroke Aphasia Quality of Life Scale (SAQOL-39), Western Aphasia Battery Revised (WAB-R), and the Stroke Aphasic Depression Questionnaire (SADQ10). WP3: educational activities and dissemination of results. WP3 includes educational activities to improve public knowledge of aphasia and dissemination of the results, with the participation of the Spanish patients’ association Afasia Activa.DiscussionThis pilot clinical trial will explore the efficacy of a new therapeutic tool based on dubbing techniques and computer technology to improve functional communication of patients suffering from post-stroke aphasia with the use of standardized test assessment.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.govNCT04289493. Registered on 28 February 2020.

Highlights

  • Communication is one of the most important predictors of social reintegration after stroke

  • Helping people recover from aphasia has been identified by consensus among survivors, caregivers, and health professionals as one of the top 10 research priorities relating to life after stroke [4]

  • We developed a singlepatient open trial with dubbing techniques in a 71-yearold woman with 15 months of chronic global aphasia after having undergone classical speech therapy with two different speech therapists

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Summary

Introduction

Communication is one of the most important predictors of social reintegration after stroke. It is estimated that approximately 15–42% of stroke survivors experience post-stroke aphasia, affecting some of the language modalities, including the production and understanding of speech, reading, and writing. Helping people recover from aphasia has been identified by consensus among survivors, caregivers, and health professionals as one of the top 10 research priorities relating to life after stroke [4]. Several SLTs use childlike materials, not being generalizable for a daily adult life. This is one of the main challenges of intensive SLT since it produces high rates of early dropouts, up to 30% [7], as patients do not feel that their preferences are being covered

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