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Tablet-based Aphasia Therapy in the Chronic Phase

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Stroke
Aphasia
Interventions
Device: brain games
Device: speech app
Behavioral: aphasia therapy
Registration Number
NCT03622411
Lead Sponsor
University Hospital, Ghent
Brief Summary

Aphasia is one of the most common and disabling disorders following stroke, in many cases resolving in long-term deficits. There is evidence that intensive aphasia therapy is effective for language recovery, even in the chronic phase post-stroke. However, as many patients are left with residual language disorders and intensive aphasia rehabilitation is difficult to achieve, the investigators are exploring tablet-based therapies to further facilitate language recovery in a cost-effective manner.

Detailed Description

This study will investigate the clinical effects of intensive tablet-based aphasia therapy as an add-on to conventional aphasia therapy (= high intensive) compared to conventional aphasia therapy (either alone, or in combination with recreational tablet use (= low intensive) in patients with aphasia following stroke, as measured by specific linguistic tests, within task improvements, functional communication and quality of life.

Furthermore, the investigators want to learn more about the recovery of specific underlying language processes via event-related potentials (ERPs). At last, the investigators aim to explore whether patients with aphasia are satisfied with a tablet-based aphasia therapy, whether the app is user-friendly and which barriers the participants might have encountered.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
15
Inclusion Criteria
  • diagnosed with mild-severe aphasia (token test score between 7 and 49) after a left hemispheric ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke
  • inclusion starting from 6 months post-stroke
  • age 18 - 85 years
  • being right-handed (according to the questionnaire for handedness, Van Strien)
  • mother tongue: Dutch
  • imaging (CT or MRI) prior to inclusion
  • signed informed consent
Exclusion Criteria
  • history of a previous stroke with persistent (> 24 hours) language symptoms
  • history of other diseases of the central nervous system, psychological disorders and (developmental) speech and/or language disorders
  • serious non-linguistic, cognitive disorders (as documented in the patients' medical history)
  • inability to perform tablet-based tasks (based on a short training session)
  • excessive use of alcohol or drugs

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
aphasia therapy + speech appaphasia therapy3 hours per week of conventional aphasia therapy during 3 weeks + 5 hours per week during 3 weeks independent practice via the speech app
aphasia therapy + brain gamesbrain games3 hours per week of conventional aphasia therapy during 3 weeks + 5 hours per week during 3 weeks of recreational tables use (brain games)
aphasia therapyaphasia therapy3 hours per week of conventional aphasia therapy during 3 weeks
aphasia therapy + speech appspeech app3 hours per week of conventional aphasia therapy during 3 weeks + 5 hours per week during 3 weeks independent practice via the speech app
aphasia therapy + brain gamesaphasia therapy3 hours per week of conventional aphasia therapy during 3 weeks + 5 hours per week during 3 weeks of recreational tables use (brain games)
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Boston Naming Test (BNT)4 months

Measure of word retrieval. Patients will have to name line drawings that gradually increase in difficulty

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Usability questionnaire1 day

a self-prepared 5 point-Likert Scale concerning the usability of the app

Quality of life (SAQOL-39-Nl)4 months

a questionnaire investigating the health-related quality of life of patients following stroke

Spontaneous speech of the Aachen Aphasia Test (AAT)4 months

spontaneous speech is elicited and scored during a semi-standardized interview

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University Hospital, department of neurology

🇧🇪

Gent, Belgium

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