Effects of seated Tai Chi Yunshou on upper limb function among stroke patients in the subacute phase: A study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
Xinglai Zhang, Chen Chen, Shaohua Chen, Zhenzhen Ma, Hang Gao, Jiayi Ren, Yuanjia Gu, Weijia Gu, Zhenkun Gao, Guo Lu, Jiming Tao, Mansour Alshehri, Mansour Alshehri, Mansour Alshehri

TL;DR
This study aims to test if seated Tai Chi Yunshou improves upper limb function in stroke patients compared to conventional treatment.
Contribution
The novelty lies in evaluating seated Tai Chi Yunshou, a modified form suitable for non-standing patients, for upper limb rehabilitation.
Findings
84 stroke patients will be randomized into experimental and control groups.
Outcomes like FMA-UE and fNIRS will assess upper limb function and brain activity.
Results may show seated Tai Chi Yunshou's effectiveness in subacute stroke rehabilitation.
Abstract
Upper limb dysfunction after stroke is one of the common problems. Tai Chi Yunshou exercise and seated Tai Chi exercise have been confirmed that it is beneficial on upper limb function for stroke patients. Seated Tai Chi Yunshou exercise easier and suitable for stroke patients who are unable to stand. The purpose of this experiment is to explore the effects of seated Tai Chi Yunshou exercise on the upper limb function for stroke patients. 84 stroke patients with upper limb dysfunction were randomly divided into two groups. The experimental group and the control group consist of 42 patients each. The experimental group will receive seated Tai Chi Yunshou training combined with conventional treatment, while the control group only will receive conventional training. Each training session will be implemented once a day and five times per week in a duration of 4 weeks. Primary and secondary…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStroke Rehabilitation and Recovery · Botulinum Toxin and Related Neurological Disorders · Balance, Gait, and Falls Prevention
