Abstract

ObjectivesThe goal of this study was to examine how the administration and dosing of the anti-serotonergic medication cyproheptadine hydrochloride (HCl) affects involuntary muscle hypertonicity of the spastic and paretic hands of stroke survivors. Materials and MethodsA randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled longitudinal intervention study was performed as a component of a larger clinical trial. 94 stroke survivors with chronic, severe hand impairment, rated as levels 2 or 3 on the Chedoke-McMaster Stroke Assessment Stage of Hand (CMSA-H), were block randomized to groups receiving doses of cyproheptadine HCl or matched doses of placebo. Doses were increased from 4 mg BID to 8 mg TID over 3 weeks. Outcomes were assessed at baseline and after each of the three weeks of intervention. Primary outcome measure was grip termination time; other measures included muscle strength, spasticity, coactivation of the long finger flexors, and recording of potential adverse effects such as sleepiness and depression. Results89 participants (receiving cyproheptadine HCl: 44, receiving placebo: 45) completed the study. The Cyproheptadine group displayed significant reduction in grip termination time, in comparison with the Placebo group (p<0.05). Significant change in the Cyproheptadine group (45% time reduction) was observed after only one week at the 4mg BID dosage. The effect was pronounced for those participants in the Cyproheptadine group with more severe hand impairment (CMSA-H level 2) at baseline. Conversely, no significant effect of Group * Session interaction was observed for spasticity (p=0.6) or coactivation (p=0.53). There were no significant changes in strength (p=0.234) or depression (p=0.441) during the trial. ConclusionsUse of cyproheptadine HCl was associated with a significant reduction in relaxation time of finger flexor muscles, without adversely affecting voluntary strength, although spasticity and coactivation were unchanged. Decreasing the duration of involuntary flexor activity can facilitate object release and repeated prehensile task performance. RegistrationClinical Trial number: NCT02418949

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call