Brady Marian C, Kelly Helen, Godwin Jon, Enderby Pam
Nursing,Midwifery and AlliedHealth Professions ResearchUnit, Glasgow Caledonian University, Glasgow, UK.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2012 May 16(5):CD000425. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD000425.pub3.
Aphasia is an acquired language impairment following brain damage that affects some or all language modalities: expression and understanding of speech, reading and writing. Approximately one-third of people who have a stroke experience aphasia.
To assess the effectiveness of speech and language therapy (SLT) for aphasia following stroke.
We searched the Cochrane Stroke Group Trials Register (last searched June 2011), MEDLINE (1966 to July 2011) and CINAHL (1982 to July 2011). In an effort to identify further published, unpublished and ongoing trials we handsearched the International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders (1969 to 2005) and reference lists of relevant articles and contacted academic institutions and other researchers. There were no language restrictions.
Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) comparing SLT (a formal intervention that aims to improve language and communication abilities, activity and participation) with (1) no SLT; (2) social support or stimulation (an intervention that provides social support and communication stimulation but does not include targeted therapeutic interventions); and (3) another SLT intervention (which differed in duration, intensity, frequency, intervention methodology or theoretical approach).
We independently extracted the data and assessed the quality of included trials. We sought missing data from investigators.
We included 39 RCTs (51 randomised comparisons) involving 2518 participants in this review. Nineteen randomised comparisons (1414 participants) compared SLT with no SLT where SLT resulted in significant benefits to patients' functional communication (standardised mean difference (SMD) 0.30, 95% CI 0.08 to 0.52, P = 0.008), receptive and expressive language. Seven randomised comparisons (432 participants) compared SLT with social support and stimulation but found no evidence of a difference in functional communication. Twenty-five randomised comparisons (910 participants) compared two approaches to SLT. There was no indication of a difference in functional communication. Generally, the trials randomised small numbers of participants across a range of characteristics (age, time since stroke and severity profiles), interventions and outcomes. Suitable statistical data were unavailable for several measures.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Our review provides some evidence of the effectiveness of SLT for people with aphasia following stroke in terms of improved functional communication, receptive and expressive language. However, some trials were poorly reported. The potential benefits of intensive SLT over conventional SLT were confounded by a significantly higher dropout from intensive SLT. More participants also withdrew from social support than SLT interventions. There was insufficient evidence to draw any conclusion regarding the effectiveness of any one specific SLT approach over another.
失语症是脑损伤后获得性语言障碍,影响部分或全部语言模式:言语表达与理解、阅读和写作。约三分之一的中风患者会出现失语症。
评估言语和语言治疗(SLT)对中风后失语症的疗效。
我们检索了Cochrane中风组试验注册库(最后检索时间为2011年6月)、MEDLINE(1966年至2011年7月)和CINAHL(1982年至2011年7月)。为了识别更多已发表、未发表和正在进行的试验,我们手工检索了《国际语言与交流障碍杂志》(1969年至2005年)以及相关文章的参考文献列表,并联系了学术机构和其他研究人员。没有语言限制。
随机对照试验(RCT),比较SLT(旨在改善语言和交流能力、活动及参与度的正式干预措施)与(1)不进行SLT;(2)社会支持或刺激(提供社会支持和交流刺激但不包括针对性治疗干预的干预措施);以及(3)另一种SLT干预(在持续时间、强度、频率、干预方法或理论方法上有所不同)。
我们独立提取数据并评估纳入试验的质量。我们向研究者索要缺失数据。
本综述纳入了39项RCT(51项随机对照比较),涉及2518名参与者。19项随机对照比较(1414名参与者)比较了SLT与不进行SLT,结果显示SLT对患者的功能性交流(标准化均数差(SMD)0.30,95%CI 0.08至0.52,P = 0.008)、接受性和表达性语言有显著益处。7项随机对照比较(432名参与者)比较了SLT与社会支持和刺激,但未发现功能性交流存在差异的证据。25项随机对照比较(910名参与者)比较了两种SLT方法。未显示功能性交流存在差异。一般来说,试验在一系列特征(年龄、中风后时间和严重程度概况)、干预措施和结局方面随机分配的参与者数量较少。几种测量方法没有合适的统计数据。
我们的综述提供了一些证据,表明SLT对中风后失语症患者在改善功能性交流、接受性和表达性语言方面是有效的。然而,一些试验报告质量较差。强化SLT相对于传统SLT的潜在益处因强化SLT的脱落率显著更高而受到混淆。退出社会支持的参与者也比退出SLT干预的更多。没有足够的证据就任何一种特定SLT方法相对于另一种方法的有效性得出结论。