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Strength Training- lower extremity

Introduction

Strength is determined by three factors: the muscle's efferent pathway, the quantity of muscle and the quality of muscle. Both the muscle and the efferent pathway can be affected by stroke, either by disuse or direct assault on the central nervous system. As a result, stroke often results in loss of functional strength.

Muscle strengthening as an intervention is designed to improve the force-generation capacity of a muscle. Its application for stroke focuses on strengthening of the hemiplegic limb and enhancing functional abilities. Various types of muscle strengthening programs have been designed for the stroke clientele. Those included in this module include resistance training, force feedback, functional tasks and weight bearing tasks.


Authors*: Adam Kagan, B.Sc; Anita Petzold, BSc OT

NOTE: *The authors have no direct financial interest in any tools, tests or interventions presented in StrokEngine.

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*high quality = PEDro score 6-10

*fair quality = PEDro score 4-5

*poor quality = PEDro score ≤ 3

The PEDro scale was developed by the Physiotherapy Evidence Database to determine the quality of clinical trials. The PEDro scale consists of a checklist of 10 scored yes-or-no questions pertaining to the internal validity and the statistical information provided. Please click on the link for more information: http://www.pedro.org.au/english/downloads/pedro-scale/

*high quality = PEDro score 6-10

*fair quality = PEDro score 4-5

*poor quality = PEDro score ≤ 3

The PEDro scale was developed by the Physiotherapy Evidence Database to determine the quality of clinical trials. The PEDro scale consists of a checklist of 10 scored yes-or-no questions pertaining to the internal validity and the statistical information provided. Please click on the link for more information: http://www.pedro.org.au/english/downloads/pedro-scale/

A randomized controlled trial (RCT) is an experimental design in which subjects are randomly assigned to a treatment group, or to a control (no treatment or alternative treatment) group. Effects of the experimental treatment are then compared statistically to results of the control treatment to determine effectiveness.

 

1a (Strong) Well-designed meta-analysis, or 2 or more high quality RCTs (PEDro ≥ 6) showing similar findings
1b(Moderate) 1 RCT of high quality (PEDro ≥ 6)
2a (Limited) At least 1 fair quality RCT (PEDro = 4-5)
2b (Limited) At least one poor quality RCT (PEDro < 4) or well-designed non-experimental study (non-randomized controlled trial, quasi-experimental studies, cohort studies with multiple baselines, single subject series with multiple baselines, etc.)
3(Consensus) Agreement by an expert panel or a group of professionals in the field or a number of pre-post studies all with similar results
4 (Conflicting) Conflicting evidence of 2 or more equally well-designed studies
5 (No evidence) No well-designed studies - only case studies/case descriptions or cohort studies/single subject series with no multiple baselines)

 

1a (Strong) Well-designed meta-analysis, or 2 or more high quality RCTs (PEDro ≥ 6) showing similar findings
1b(Moderate) 1 RCT of high quality (PEDro ≥ 6)
2a (Limited) At least 1 fair quality RCT (PEDro = 4-5)
2b (Limited) At least one poor quality RCT (PEDro < 4) or well-designed non-experimental study (non-randomized controlled trial, quasi-experimental studies, cohort studies with multiple baselines, single subject series with multiple baselines, etc.)
3(Consensus) Agreement by an expert panel or a group of professionals in the field or a number of pre-post studies all with similar results
4 (Conflicting) Conflicting evidence of 2 or more equally well-designed studies
5 (No evidence) No well-designed studies - only case studies/case descriptions or cohort studies/single subject series with no multiple baselines)

 

1a (Strong) Well-designed meta-analysis, or 2 or more high quality RCTs (PEDro ≥ 6) showing similar findings
1b(Moderate) 1 RCT of high quality (PEDro ≥ 6)
2a (Limited) At least 1 fair quality RCT (PEDro = 4-5)
2b (Limited) At least one poor quality RCT (PEDro < 4) or well-designed non-experimental study (non-randomized controlled trial, quasi-experimental studies, cohort studies with multiple baselines, single subject series with multiple baselines, etc.)
3(Consensus) Agreement by an expert panel or a group of professionals in the field or a number of pre-post studies all with similar results
4 (Conflicting) Conflicting evidence of 2 or more equally well-designed studies
5 (No evidence) No well-designed studies - only case studies/case descriptions or cohort studies/single subject series with no multiple baselines)

 

1a (Strong) Well-designed meta-analysis, or 2 or more high quality RCTs (PEDro ≥ 6) showing similar findings
1b(Moderate) 1 RCT of high quality (PEDro ≥ 6)
2a (Limited) At least 1 fair quality RCT (PEDro = 4-5)
2b (Limited) At least one poor quality RCT (PEDro < 4) or well-designed non-experimental study (non-randomized controlled trial, quasi-experimental studies, cohort studies with multiple baselines, single subject series with multiple baselines, etc.)
3(Consensus) Agreement by an expert panel or a group of professionals in the field or a number of pre-post studies all with similar results
4 (Conflicting) Conflicting evidence of 2 or more equally well-designed studies
5 (No evidence) No well-designed studies - only case studies/case descriptions or cohort studies/single subject series with no multiple baselines)

 

1a (Strong) Well-designed meta-analysis, or 2 or more high quality RCTs (PEDro ≥ 6) showing similar findings
1b(Moderate) 1 RCT of high quality (PEDro ≥ 6)
2a (Limited) At least 1 fair quality RCT (PEDro = 4-5)
2b (Limited) At least one poor quality RCT (PEDro < 4) or well-designed non-experimental study (non-randomized controlled trial, quasi-experimental studies, cohort studies with multiple baselines, single subject series with multiple baselines, etc.)
3(Consensus) Agreement by an expert panel or a group of professionals in the field or a number of pre-post studies all with similar results
4 (Conflicting) Conflicting evidence of 2 or more equally well-designed studies
5 (No evidence) No well-designed studies - only case studies/case descriptions or cohort studies/single subject series with no multiple baselines)

Patients longer than 6 months post-stroke are identified as in chronic stage of recovery.

A randomized controlled trial (RCT) is an experimental design in which subjects are randomly assigned to a treatment group, or to a control (no treatment or alternative treatment) group. Effects of the experimental treatment are then compared statistically to results of the control treatment to determine effectiveness.

*high quality = PEDro score 6-10

*fair quality = PEDro score 4-5

*poor quality = PEDro score ≤ 3

The PEDro scale was developed by the Physiotherapy Evidence Database to determine the quality of clinical trials. The PEDro scale consists of a checklist of 10 scored yes-or-no questions pertaining to the internal validity and the statistical information provided. Please click on the link for more information: http://www.pedro.org.au/english/downloads/pedro-scale/

 

1a (Strong) Well-designed meta-analysis, or 2 or more high quality RCTs (PEDro ≥ 6) showing similar findings
1b(Moderate) 1 RCT of high quality (PEDro ≥ 6)
2a (Limited) At least 1 fair quality RCT (PEDro = 4-5)
2b (Limited) At least one poor quality RCT (PEDro < 4) or well-designed non-experimental study (non-randomized controlled trial, quasi-experimental studies, cohort studies with multiple baselines, single subject series with multiple baselines, etc.)
3(Consensus) Agreement by an expert panel or a group of professionals in the field or a number of pre-post studies all with similar results
4 (Conflicting) Conflicting evidence of 2 or more equally well-designed studies
5 (No evidence) No well-designed studies - only case studies/case descriptions or cohort studies/single subject series with no multiple baselines)

 

*high quality = PEDro score 6-10

*fair quality = PEDro score 4-5

*poor quality = PEDro score ≤ 3

The PEDro scale was developed by the Physiotherapy Evidence Database to determine the quality of clinical trials. The PEDro scale consists of a checklist of 10 scored yes-or-no questions pertaining to the internal validity and the statistical information provided. Please click on the link for more information: http://www.pedro.org.au/english/downloads/pedro-scale/

 

1a (Strong) Well-designed meta-analysis, or 2 or more high quality RCTs (PEDro ≥ 6) showing similar findings
1b(Moderate) 1 RCT of high quality (PEDro ≥ 6)
2a (Limited) At least 1 fair quality RCT (PEDro = 4-5)
2b (Limited) At least one poor quality RCT (PEDro < 4) or well-designed non-experimental study (non-randomized controlled trial, quasi-experimental studies, cohort studies with multiple baselines, single subject series with multiple baselines, etc.)
3(Consensus) Agreement by an expert panel or a group of professionals in the field or a number of pre-post studies all with similar results
4 (Conflicting) Conflicting evidence of 2 or more equally well-designed studies
5 (No evidence) No well-designed studies - only case studies/case descriptions or cohort studies/single subject series with no multiple baselines)

 

1a (Strong) Well-designed meta-analysis, or 2 or more high quality RCTs (PEDro ≥ 6) showing similar findings
1b(Moderate) 1 RCT of high quality (PEDro ≥ 6)
2a (Limited) At least 1 fair quality RCT (PEDro = 4-5)
2b (Limited) At least one poor quality RCT (PEDro < 4) or well-designed non-experimental study (non-randomized controlled trial, quasi-experimental studies, cohort studies with multiple baselines, single subject series with multiple baselines, etc.)
3(Consensus) Agreement by an expert panel or a group of professionals in the field or a number of pre-post studies all with similar results
4 (Conflicting) Conflicting evidence of 2 or more equally well-designed studies
5 (No evidence) No well-designed studies - only case studies/case descriptions or cohort studies/single subject series with no multiple baselines)

 

*high quality = PEDro score 6-10

*fair quality = PEDro score 4-5

*poor quality = PEDro score ≤ 3

The PEDro scale was developed by the Physiotherapy Evidence Database to determine the quality of clinical trials. The PEDro scale consists of a checklist of 10 scored yes-or-no questions pertaining to the internal validity and the statistical information provided. Please click on the link for more information: http://www.pedro.org.au/english/downloads/pedro-scale/

*high quality = PEDro score 6-10

*fair quality = PEDro score 4-5

*poor quality = PEDro score ≤ 3

The PEDro scale was developed by the Physiotherapy Evidence Database to determine the quality of clinical trials. The PEDro scale consists of a checklist of 10 scored yes-or-no questions pertaining to the internal validity and the statistical information provided. Please click on the link for more information: http://www.pedro.org.au/english/downloads/pedro-scale/

 

A randomized controlled trial (RCT) is an experimental design in which subjects are randomly assigned to a treatment group, or to a control (no treatment or alternative treatment) group. Effects of the experimental treatment are then compared statistically to results of the control treatment to determine effectiveness.

1a (Strong) Well-designed meta-analysis, or 2 or more high quality RCTs (PEDro ≥ 6) showing similar findings
1b(Moderate) 1 RCT of high quality (PEDro ≥ 6)
2a (Limited) At least 1 fair quality RCT (PEDro = 4-5)
2b (Limited) At least one poor quality RCT (PEDro < 4) or well-designed non-experimental study (non-randomized controlled trial, quasi-experimental studies, cohort studies with multiple baselines, single subject series with multiple baselines, etc.)
3(Consensus) Agreement by an expert panel or a group of professionals in the field or a number of pre-post studies all with similar results
4 (Conflicting) Conflicting evidence of 2 or more equally well-designed studies
5 (No evidence) No well-designed studies - only case studies/case descriptions or cohort studies/single subject series with no multiple baselines)

 

*high quality = PEDro score 6-10

*fair quality = PEDro score 4-5

*poor quality = PEDro score ≤ 3

The PEDro scale was developed by the Physiotherapy Evidence Database to determine the quality of clinical trials. The PEDro scale consists of a checklist of 10 scored yes-or-no questions pertaining to the internal validity and the statistical information provided. Please click on the link for more information: http://www.pedro.org.au/english/downloads/pedro-scale/

A randomized controlled trial (RCT) is an experimental design in which subjects are randomly assigned to a treatment group, or to a control (no treatment or alternative treatment) group. Effects of the experimental treatment are then compared statistically to results of the control treatment to determine effectiveness.

*high quality = PEDro score 6-10

*fair quality = PEDro score 4-5

*poor quality = PEDro score ≤ 3

The PEDro scale was developed by the Physiotherapy Evidence Database to determine the quality of clinical trials. The PEDro scale consists of a checklist of 10 scored yes-or-no questions pertaining to the internal validity and the statistical information provided. Please click on the link for more information: http://www.pedro.org.au/english/downloads/pedro-scale/

 

1a (Strong) Well-designed meta-analysis, or 2 or more high quality RCTs (PEDro ≥ 6) showing similar findings
1b(Moderate) 1 RCT of high quality (PEDro ≥ 6)
2a (Limited) At least 1 fair quality RCT (PEDro = 4-5)
2b (Limited) At least one poor quality RCT (PEDro < 4) or well-designed non-experimental study (non-randomized controlled trial, quasi-experimental studies, cohort studies with multiple baselines, single subject series with multiple baselines, etc.)
3(Consensus) Agreement by an expert panel or a group of professionals in the field or a number of pre-post studies all with similar results
4 (Conflicting) Conflicting evidence of 2 or more equally well-designed studies
5 (No evidence) No well-designed studies - only case studies/case descriptions or cohort studies/single subject series with no multiple baselines)

*high quality = PEDro score 6-10

*fair quality = PEDro score 4-5

*poor quality = PEDro score ≤ 3

The PEDro scale was developed by the Physiotherapy Evidence Database to determine the quality of clinical trials. The PEDro scale consists of a checklist of 10 scored yes-or-no questions pertaining to the internal validity and the statistical information provided. Please click on the link for more information: http://www.pedro.org.au/english/downloads/pedro-scale/

A randomized controlled trial (RCT) is an experimental design in which subjects are randomly assigned to a treatment group, or to a control (no treatment or alternative treatment) group. Effects of the experimental treatment are then compared statistically to results of the control treatment to determine effectiveness.

 

1a (Strong) Well-designed meta-analysis, or 2 or more high quality RCTs (PEDro ≥ 6) showing similar findings
1b(Moderate) 1 RCT of high quality (PEDro ≥ 6)
2a (Limited) At least 1 fair quality RCT (PEDro = 4-5)
2b (Limited) At least one poor quality RCT (PEDro < 4) or well-designed non-experimental study (non-randomized controlled trial, quasi-experimental studies, cohort studies with multiple baselines, single subject series with multiple baselines, etc.)
3(Consensus) Agreement by an expert panel or a group of professionals in the field or a number of pre-post studies all with similar results
4 (Conflicting) Conflicting evidence of 2 or more equally well-designed studies
5 (No evidence) No well-designed studies - only case studies/case descriptions or cohort studies/single subject series with no multiple baselines)

*high quality = PEDro score 6-10

*fair quality = PEDro score 4-5

*poor quality = PEDro score ≤ 3

The PEDro scale was developed by the Physiotherapy Evidence Database to determine the quality of clinical trials. The PEDro scale consists of a checklist of 10 scored yes-or-no questions pertaining to the internal validity and the statistical information provided. Please click on the link for more information: http://www.pedro.org.au/english/downloads/pedro-scale/

A randomized controlled trial (RCT) is an experimental design in which subjects are randomly assigned to a treatment group, or to a control (no treatment or alternative treatment) group. Effects of the experimental treatment are then compared statistically to results of the control treatment to determine effectiveness.

 

1a (Strong) Well-designed meta-analysis, or 2 or more high quality RCTs (PEDro ≥ 6) showing similar findings
1b(Moderate) 1 RCT of high quality (PEDro ≥ 6)
2a (Limited) At least 1 fair quality RCT (PEDro = 4-5)
2b (Limited) At least one poor quality RCT (PEDro < 4) or well-designed non-experimental study (non-randomized controlled trial, quasi-experimental studies, cohort studies with multiple baselines, single subject series with multiple baselines, etc.)
3(Consensus) Agreement by an expert panel or a group of professionals in the field or a number of pre-post studies all with similar results
4 (Conflicting) Conflicting evidence of 2 or more equally well-designed studies
5 (No evidence) No well-designed studies - only case studies/case descriptions or cohort studies/single subject series with no multiple baselines)

*high quality = PEDro score 6-10

*fair quality = PEDro score 4-5

*poor quality = PEDro score ≤ 3

The PEDro scale was developed by the Physiotherapy Evidence Database to determine the quality of clinical trials. The PEDro scale consists of a checklist of 10 scored yes-or-no questions pertaining to the internal validity and the statistical information provided. Please click on the link for more information: http://www.pedro.org.au/english/downloads/pedro-scale/

A randomized controlled trial (RCT) is an experimental design in which subjects are randomly assigned to a treatment group, or to a control (no treatment or alternative treatment) group. Effects of the experimental treatment are then compared statistically to results of the control treatment to determine effectiveness.

*high quality = PEDro score 6-10

*fair quality = PEDro score 4-5

*poor quality = PEDro score ≤ 3

The PEDro scale was developed by the Physiotherapy Evidence Database to determine the quality of clinical trials. The PEDro scale consists of a checklist of 10 scored yes-or-no questions pertaining to the internal validity and the statistical information provided. Please click on the link for more information: http://www.pedro.org.au/english/downloads/pedro-scale/

1a (Strong) Well-designed meta-analysis, or 2 or more high quality RCTs (PEDro ≥ 6) showing similar findings
1b(Moderate) 1 RCT of high quality (PEDro ≥ 6)
2a (Limited) At least 1 fair quality RCT (PEDro = 4-5)
2b (Limited) At least one poor quality RCT (PEDro < 4) or well-designed non-experimental study (non-randomized controlled trial, quasi-experimental studies, cohort studies with multiple baselines, single subject series with multiple baselines, etc.)
3(Consensus) Agreement by an expert panel or a group of professionals in the field or a number of pre-post studies all with similar results
4 (Conflicting) Conflicting evidence of 2 or more equally well-designed studies
5 (No evidence) No well-designed studies - only case studies/case descriptions or cohort studies/single subject series with no multiple baselines)

 

*high quality = PEDro score 6-10

*fair quality = PEDro score 4-5

*poor quality = PEDro score ≤ 3

The PEDro scale was developed by the Physiotherapy Evidence Database to determine the quality of clinical trials. The PEDro scale consists of a checklist of 10 scored yes-or-no questions pertaining to the internal validity and the statistical information provided. Please click on the link for more information: http://www.pedro.org.au/english/downloads/pedro-scale/

A randomized controlled trial (RCT) is an experimental design in which subjects are randomly assigned to a treatment group, or to a control (no treatment or alternative treatment) group. Effects of the experimental treatment are then compared statistically to results of the control treatment to determine effectiveness.

 

1a (Strong) Well-designed meta-analysis, or 2 or more high quality RCTs (PEDro ≥ 6) showing similar findings
1b(Moderate) 1 RCT of high quality (PEDro ≥ 6)
2a (Limited) At least 1 fair quality RCT (PEDro = 4-5)
2b (Limited) At least one poor quality RCT (PEDro < 4) or well-designed non-experimental study (non-randomized controlled trial, quasi-experimental studies, cohort studies with multiple baselines, single subject series with multiple baselines, etc.)
3(Consensus) Agreement by an expert panel or a group of professionals in the field or a number of pre-post studies all with similar results
4 (Conflicting) Conflicting evidence of 2 or more equally well-designed studies
5 (No evidence) No well-designed studies - only case studies/case descriptions or cohort studies/single subject series with no multiple baselines)

 

*high quality = PEDro score 6-10

*fair quality = PEDro score 4-5

*poor quality = PEDro score ≤ 3

The PEDro scale was developed by the Physiotherapy Evidence Database to determine the quality of clinical trials. The PEDro scale consists of a checklist of 10 scored yes-or-no questions pertaining to the internal validity and the statistical information provided. Please click on the link for more information: http://www.pedro.org.au/english/downloads/pedro-scale/

A randomized controlled trial (RCT) is an experimental design in which subjects are randomly assigned to a treatment group, or to a control (no treatment or alternative treatment) group. Effects of the experimental treatment are then compared statistically to results of the control treatment to determine effectiveness.

 

1a (Strong) Well-designed meta-analysis, or 2 or more high quality RCTs (PEDro ≥ 6) showing similar findings
1b(Moderate) 1 RCT of high quality (PEDro ≥ 6)
2a (Limited) At least 1 fair quality RCT (PEDro = 4-5)
2b (Limited) At least one poor quality RCT (PEDro < 4) or well-designed non-experimental study (non-randomized controlled trial, quasi-experimental studies, cohort studies with multiple baselines, single subject series with multiple baselines, etc.)
3(Consensus) Agreement by an expert panel or a group of professionals in the field or a number of pre-post studies all with similar results
4 (Conflicting) Conflicting evidence of 2 or more equally well-designed studies
5 (No evidence) No well-designed studies - only case studies/case descriptions or cohort studies/single subject series with no multiple baselines)

*high quality = PEDro score 6-10

*fair quality = PEDro score 4-5

*poor quality = PEDro score ≤ 3

The PEDro scale was developed by the Physiotherapy Evidence Database to determine the quality of clinical trials. The PEDro scale consists of a checklist of 10 scored yes-or-no questions pertaining to the internal validity and the statistical information provided. Please click on the link for more information: http://www.pedro.org.au/english/downloads/pedro-scale/

 

1a (Strong) Well-designed meta-analysis, or 2 or more high quality RCTs (PEDro ≥ 6) showing similar findings
1b(Moderate) 1 RCT of high quality (PEDro ≥ 6)
2a (Limited) At least 1 fair quality RCT (PEDro = 4-5)
2b (Limited) At least one poor quality RCT (PEDro < 4) or well-designed non-experimental study (non-randomized controlled trial, quasi-experimental studies, cohort studies with multiple baselines, single subject series with multiple baselines, etc.)
3(Consensus) Agreement by an expert panel or a group of professionals in the field or a number of pre-post studies all with similar results
4 (Conflicting) Conflicting evidence of 2 or more equally well-designed studies
5 (No evidence) No well-designed studies - only case studies/case descriptions or cohort studies/single subject series with no multiple baselines)

 

1a (Strong) Well-designed meta-analysis, or 2 or more high quality RCTs (PEDro ≥ 6) showing similar findings
1b(Moderate) 1 RCT of high quality (PEDro ≥ 6)
2a (Limited) At least 1 fair quality RCT (PEDro = 4-5)
2b (Limited) At least one poor quality RCT (PEDro < 4) or well-designed non-experimental study (non-randomized controlled trial, quasi-experimental studies, cohort studies with multiple baselines, single subject series with multiple baselines, etc.)
3(Consensus) Agreement by an expert panel or a group of professionals in the field or a number of pre-post studies all with similar results
4 (Conflicting) Conflicting evidence of 2 or more equally well-designed studies
5 (No evidence) No well-designed studies - only case studies/case descriptions or cohort studies/single subject series with no multiple baselines)

 

*high quality = PEDro score 6-10

*fair quality = PEDro score 4-5

*poor quality = PEDro score ≤ 3

The PEDro scale was developed by the Physiotherapy Evidence Database to determine the quality of clinical trials. The PEDro scale consists of a checklist of 10 scored yes-or-no questions pertaining to the internal validity and the statistical information provided. Please click on the link for more information: http://www.pedro.org.au/english/downloads/pedro-scale/

A randomized controlled trial (RCT) is an experimental design in which subjects are randomly assigned to a treatment group, or to a control (no treatment or alternative treatment) group. Effects of the experimental treatment are then compared statistically to results of the control treatment to determine effectiveness.

 

1a (Strong) Well-designed meta-analysis, or 2 or more high quality RCTs (PEDro ≥ 6) showing similar findings
1b(Moderate) 1 RCT of high quality (PEDro ≥ 6)
2a (Limited) At least 1 fair quality RCT (PEDro = 4-5)
2b (Limited) At least one poor quality RCT (PEDro < 4) or well-designed non-experimental study (non-randomized controlled trial, quasi-experimental studies, cohort studies with multiple baselines, single subject series with multiple baselines, etc.)
3(Consensus) Agreement by an expert panel or a group of professionals in the field or a number of pre-post studies all with similar results
4 (Conflicting) Conflicting evidence of 2 or more equally well-designed studies
5 (No evidence) No well-designed studies - only case studies/case descriptions or cohort studies/single subject series with no multiple baselines)

 

*high quality = PEDro score 6-10

*fair quality = PEDro score 4-5

*poor quality = PEDro score ≤ 3

The PEDro scale was developed by the Physiotherapy Evidence Database to determine the quality of clinical trials. The PEDro scale consists of a checklist of 10 scored yes-or-no questions pertaining to the internal validity and the statistical information provided. Please click on the link for more information: http://www.pedro.org.au/english/downloads/pedro-scale/

A randomized controlled trial (RCT) is an experimental design in which subjects are randomly assigned to a treatment group, or to a control (no treatment or alternative treatment) group. Effects of the experimental treatment are then compared statistically to results of the control treatment to determine effectiveness.

 

*high quality = PEDro score 6-10

*fair quality = PEDro score 4-5

*poor quality = PEDro score ≤ 3

The PEDro scale was developed by the Physiotherapy Evidence Database to determine the quality of clinical trials. The PEDro scale consists of a checklist of 10 scored yes-or-no questions pertaining to the internal validity and the statistical information provided. Please click on the link for more information: http://www.pedro.org.au/english/downloads/pedro-scale/

 

1a (Strong) Well-designed meta-analysis, or 2 or more high quality RCTs (PEDro ≥ 6) showing similar findings
1b(Moderate) 1 RCT of high quality (PEDro ≥ 6)
2a (Limited) At least 1 fair quality RCT (PEDro = 4-5)
2b (Limited) At least one poor quality RCT (PEDro < 4) or well-designed non-experimental study (non-randomized controlled trial, quasi-experimental studies, cohort studies with multiple baselines, single subject series with multiple baselines, etc.)
3(Consensus) Agreement by an expert panel or a group of professionals in the field or a number of pre-post studies all with similar results
4 (Conflicting) Conflicting evidence of 2 or more equally well-designed studies
5 (No evidence) No well-designed studies - only case studies/case descriptions or cohort studies/single subject series with no multiple baselines)

*high quality = PEDro score 6-10

*fair quality = PEDro score 4-5

*poor quality = PEDro score ≤ 3

The PEDro scale was developed by the Physiotherapy Evidence Database to determine the quality of clinical trials. The PEDro scale consists of a checklist of 10 scored yes-or-no questions pertaining to the internal validity and the statistical information provided. Please click on the link for more information: http://www.pedro.org.au/english/downloads/pedro-scale/

A randomized controlled trial (RCT) is an experimental design in which subjects are randomly assigned to a treatment group, or to a control (no treatment or alternative treatment) group. Effects of the experimental treatment are then compared statistically to results of the control treatment to determine effectiveness.

*high quality = PEDro score 6-10

*fair quality = PEDro score 4-5

*poor quality = PEDro score ≤ 3

The PEDro scale was developed by the Physiotherapy Evidence Database to determine the quality of clinical trials. The PEDro scale consists of a checklist of 10 scored yes-or-no questions pertaining to the internal validity and the statistical information provided. Please click on the link for more information: http://www.pedro.org.au/english/downloads/pedro-scale/

 

1a (Strong) Well-designed meta-analysis, or 2 or more high quality RCTs (PEDro ≥ 6) showing similar findings
1b(Moderate) 1 RCT of high quality (PEDro ≥ 6)
2a (Limited) At least 1 fair quality RCT (PEDro = 4-5)
2b (Limited) At least one poor quality RCT (PEDro < 4) or well-designed non-experimental study (non-randomized controlled trial, quasi-experimental studies, cohort studies with multiple baselines, single subject series with multiple baselines, etc.)
3(Consensus) Agreement by an expert panel or a group of professionals in the field or a number of pre-post studies all with similar results
4 (Conflicting) Conflicting evidence of 2 or more equally well-designed studies
5 (No evidence) No well-designed studies - only case studies/case descriptions or cohort studies/single subject series with no multiple baselines)