[Purpose] The purpose of this study was to confirm the effect of robot-assisted gait
training on the balance and gait ability of stroke patients who were dependent ambulators.
[Subjects and Methods] Twenty stroke patients participated in this study. The participants
were allocated to either group 1, which received robot-assisted gait training for 4 weeks
followed by conventional physical therapy for 4 weeks, or group 2, which received the same
treatments in the reverse order. Robot-assisted gait training was conducted for 30 min, 3
times a week for 4 weeks. The Berg Balance Scale, Modified Functional Reach Test,
Functional Ambulation Category, Modified Ashworth Scale, Fugl-Meyer Assessment, Motricity
Index, and Modified Barthel Index were assessed before and after treatment. To confirm the
characteristics of patients who showed a significant increase in Berg Balance Scale after
robot-assisted gait training as compared with physical therapy, subgroup analysis was
conducted. [Results] Only lateral reaching and the Functional Ambulation Category were
significantly increased following robot-assisted gait training. Subscale analyses
identified 3 patient subgroups that responded well to robot-assisted gait training: a
subgroup with hemiplegia, a subgroup in which the guidance force needed to be decreased to
needed to be decreased to ≤45%, and a subgroup in which weight bearing was decreased to
≤21%. [Conclusion] The present study showed that robot-assisted gait training is not only
effective in improving balance and gait performance but also improves trunk balance and
motor skills required by high-severity stroke patients to perform activities daily living.
Moreover, subscale analyses identified subgroups that responded well to robot-assisted
gait training.
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