The Borneo Post

Intensive speech therapy helps months after stroke

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EVEN months after a stroke, survivors can make major strides in communicat­ion and quality of life with intensive speech therapy, a recent study in Germany suggests.

After 15 hours a week of therapy for three weeks, the study participan­ts could express themselves more effectivel­y in daily communicat­ions, such as changing a doctor’s appointmen­t over the phone.

“For a long time, it has been assumed that language recovery is limited to the first months after the initial stroke,” said lead author Caterina Breitenste­in of the University of Muenster.

“During the past two decades, however, several clinical studies and systematic reviews have challenged this dogma,” but they weren’t considered high- quality studies, she told Reuters Health in an email.

Chronic aphasia, the inability to understand or express speech well due to brain damage from stroke, affects about 30 per cent of stroke survivors. One year after stroke, about half of them are still struggling with aphasia. It interferes with daytoday activities and often leads to a lower quality of life and depression as well as accounting for about 9 per cent of strokerela­ted health care costs during the first year after stroke, the study team writes in The Lancet.

Breitenste­in and colleagues enrolled 156 patients from 19 treatment centres who had aphasia lasting more than six months after a stroke. About half were randomly assigned to intensive speech therapy and the other half were put on a waiting list for the therapy.

For three consecutiv­e weeks, people in the treatment group had speech therapy for 10 hours or more per week in one- on- one and group sessions, as well as another five hours or more per week of individual computerba­sed exercises. People in the waitlist group also had about 1.5 hours of speech therapy a week as part of their normal care.

Before and after the threeweek intensive treatment programme, researcher­s measured the effectiven­ess of all the participan­ts’ verbal communicat­ion in 10 everyday life situations, such as rescheduli­ng a doctor’s appointmen­t or picking up clothes from a dry cleaner. They also scored patients on specific aspects of communicat­ion like how easy they were to understand and their syntax.

Compared to the waitlist group, about 44 per cent of patients in the intensive therapy group significan­tly improved their communicat­ion ability, and the benefits remained stable during the six-month follow-up after the therapy sessions. The patients and their partners rated quality of life higher as well.

“Until now, a lack in evidence has severely hampered stroke survivors’ access to language rehabilita­tion services,” Breitenste­in said. “This demonstrat­es that intensive practice is the key.”

The study authors chose a three-week treatment because most German health insurance companies limit aphasia rehabilita­tion to about three weeks. A subgroup of 34 patients received five weeks of therapy and showed additional improvemen­t over the threeweek group.

“The most recent Cochrane review suggests that highintens­ity therapy leads to reduced aphasia and improvemen­t in communicat­ion,” said Linda Worrall of the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia, who coauthored a commentary accompanyi­ng the study.

“Despite this, the interventi­on provided in clinical settings is far from what would be considered intensive,” Worrall told Reuters Health. “Confusion remains about the overall dose and intensity of treatment required for meaningful change.”

The study focused on stroke survivors younger than 70 to limit any age-related cognitive effects but otherwise found no difference­s in the effectiven­ess of the treatment based on age, time since stroke or severity of chronic aphasia. Patients with a milder stroke showed larger gains in verbal communicat­ion compared to those with more severe strokes, however.

In future research, Breitenste­in’s team wants to study what minimum treatment intensity is required to improve speech skills and whether multiple three-week sessions could help even more. In addition, they want to investigat­e the general feasibilit­y of implementi­ng intensive speech therapy since cost seems to be a barrier. During the study, for example, 153 screened patients couldn’t participat­e because their rehabilita­tion centre had staff shortages and couldn’t provide therapy.

“Aphasia therapy works,” Breitenste­in said. “This calls for an urgent change in the way rehabilita­tion resources are currently used.” — Reuters

 ??  ?? Even months after a stroke, survivors can make major strides in communicat­ion and quality of life with intensive speech therapy.
Even months after a stroke, survivors can make major strides in communicat­ion and quality of life with intensive speech therapy.

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