Core stability exercises in addition to usual care physiotherapy improve stability and balance following stroke: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

2020 
Abstract Objective To systematically review the effect of core stability exercises in addition to usual care physiotherapy on patient outcomes following stroke. Data Sources CINAHL, MEDLINE, PEDro, PubMed and EMBASE were searched to November 2018. Study Selection Eleven randomized controlled trials that compared usual care physiotherapy to usual care physiotherapy with additional core stability exercises in people with stroke were included. The initial search yielded 1,876 studies. Data Extraction Two independent reviewers applied inclusion and exclusion criteria and extracted data on methodological quality using the PEDro scale, participant characteristics, intervention details, outcome measures and results. Data Synthesis Post-intervention means and standard deviations were pooled to calculate either the standardised mean difference (SMD) or the mean difference (MD) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) using a random-effects model and inverse variance methods. There was moderate quality evidence to suggest the addition of core stability exercises to usual care physiotherapy improved trunk control (SMD 0.94, 95%CI .44 to 1.44, I2 69%), functional dynamic balance (SMD 1.23, 95%CI .5 to 1.97 I2 71%) and walking speed (MD .27 m/s, 95%CI .01 to .52, I2 40%) in people with acute and chronic stroke. No significant effect was found when assessing functional ambulation categories or the Timed Up and Go Test and mixed results were found for global functioning. Conclusion The addition of core stability exercises to usual care physiotherapy following stroke may lead to improved trunk control and dynamic balance. Therefore, core stability exercises should be included in rehabilitation if improvements in these domains will help the client to achieve their goals. Future trials should consider incorporating outcomes of body kinematics during functional tasks to assess movement quality and assess participation outcomes.
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