Physical Therapy, University of Mount Union, Alliance, Ohio, USA.
Physical Therapy, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA.
F1000Res. 2024 Aug 29;13:166. doi: 10.12688/f1000research.144582.2. eCollection 2024.
Most stroke survivors consider community ambulation an essential but unmet goal of their recovery. Historically, interventions to enhance community ambulation have focused on improving biomechanical impairments of gait; however, recent evidence suggests that biopsychosocial and environmental factors may impact community ambulation, even beyond more obvious physical impairments. The identification of factors that pose as significant facilitators or barriers to community ambulation may serve to guide stakeholders in designing relevant and evidence-based interventions for improving community ambulation post-stroke.
This review aims to map the type and extent of existing evidence on the physical, biopsychosocial, and environmental factors affecting community ambulation post-stroke. Additionally, this review will describe the various methods used to examine the extent to which stroke survivors are restricted to community ambulation.
Nine databases will be searched including CINAHL, PubMed, and Web of Science. We will include studies published in English during or after 2001. Studies that examine physical, biopsychosocial, and/or environmental factors affecting community ambulation in ambulatory adults at least six months post-stroke will be considered for inclusion. Studies that assess general physical activity or community mobility through transportation modes other than walking will be excluded. All identified records will be collated in citation management software, followed by steps of deduplication, title/abstract screening, and full-text reviews by at least two independent reviewers. The bibliographies of the extracted studies will also be reviewed for relevant articles. The extracted studies will be analyzed, critically appraised, and presented in tabular, narrative, and evidence map formats.
The evidence gained will be used to build a framework for community ambulation, informing stakeholders to develop meaningful interventions to improve community ambulation. The mapped evidence will motivate future studies to develop holistic approaches that specifically focus on the most vital factors that influence post-stroke community ambulation.
大多数中风幸存者认为社区活动是他们康复的一个重要但未满足的目标。历史上,增强社区活动能力的干预措施一直侧重于改善步态的生物力学障碍;然而,最近的证据表明,生物心理社会和环境因素可能会影响社区活动能力,甚至超出更明显的身体障碍。确定对社区活动能力构成重大促进或障碍的因素,可以为利益相关者设计相关的基于证据的干预措施提供指导,以提高中风后患者的社区活动能力。
本综述旨在绘制影响中风后社区活动能力的身体、生物心理社会和环境因素的现有证据的类型和范围。此外,本综述还将描述用于检查中风幸存者在多大程度上受到社区活动限制的各种方法。
将检索九个数据库,包括 CINAHL、PubMed 和 Web of Science。我们将纳入 2001 年及以后发表的英文研究。纳入的研究将检查影响至少六个月后能够独立行走的中风成年患者社区活动能力的身体、生物心理社会和/或环境因素。评估通过步行以外的交通方式进行的一般身体活动或社区活动的研究将被排除在外。所有识别出的记录将在引文管理软件中进行整理,然后进行重复记录删除、标题/摘要筛选以及至少两名独立审查员进行全文审查。提取研究的参考文献也将进行综述,以找到相关文章。提取的研究将以表格、叙述和证据图的格式进行分析、批判性评估和呈现。
获得的证据将用于构建社区活动能力框架,为利益相关者提供信息,以制定有意义的干预措施来改善社区活动能力。映射的证据将激励未来的研究发展整体方法,专门关注影响中风后社区活动能力的最重要因素。