Research to improve speech rehab for stroke patients
Friday 6 October, 2017
Research to improve speech rehab for stroke patients
Tauranga Hospital is one of two New Zealand hospitals taking part in one of the largest Australasian clinical trials designed to improve language rehabilitation for people recovering from stroke.
The Very Early Rehabilitation in Speech (VERSE) study seeks to better understand the best way of treating people having difficulty with speech and language (aphasia) after having a stroke.
“The trial focuses on recruiting patients within the first 14 days following a stroke,” said Speech-Language Therapist Dr Meghann Grawburg, who is leading the research at Tauranga Hospital. “We are interested to find out what kind of therapy and how much therapy is needed for best recovery in the early days after a stroke.”
Patients will be randomly assigned to one of three different speech therapy treatment programmes of various levels of intensity. Over the course of a month they’ll go through speech therapy exercises up to five hours a week.
A team of 11 speech therapists at Tauranga Hospital is involved in the trial which will continue through to December.
“We aim to have at least 10 Bay of Plenty patients on the trial. As well as language loss, the selection criteria involves the patient having a certain level of alertness, which in the early days after a stroke isn’t always that common,” said Dr Grawburg.
Christchurch Hospital is also taking part in the trial along with 16 hospitals across Australia. The VERSE Trial based at Edith Cowan University in Western Australia aims to have 246 stroke patients participate in the trial.
Factbox 1
Stroke is the third largest killer in New Zealand (about 2500 people every year). Around 10 percent of stroke deaths occur in people under 65.
Every day about 24 New Zealanders have a
stroke. A quarter occur in people under 65.
High blood
pressure is a major cause of strokes. One in five New
Zealanders has high blood pressure, and a third of these
don’t know it. Reducing your blood pressure can greatly
reduce stroke risk.
Factbox 2
What are the signs of stroke?
The signs and symptoms of stroke usually come on suddenly. The type of signs experienced will depend on what area of the brain is affected.
Common first signs of stroke include:
· Sudden
weakness and/or numbness of face, arm and/or leg especially
on one side of the body.
· Sudden blurred or
loss of vision in one or both eyes.
· Sudden
difficulty speaking or understanding what others are
saying.
· Sudden loss of balance or an
unexplained fall or difficulty controlling movements,
especially with any of the other
signs.
ends