Plain-English translation of NCT06504836 on ClinicalTrials.gov ↗ · Source last updated · Translation generated · How we translate trials
Read our Stroke research guide →This study doesn't follow the usual testing phases — it may be an observational study or a different type of research.
After a stroke, many people struggle with walking—it becomes uneven and unpredictable. This trial is testing a special device system that gives real-time feedback about your hip movements during a walking training session. The goal is to see whether this kinematic biofeedback device helps people with chronic stroke walk more smoothly and symmetrically.
Most stroke recovery programs focus on helping people walk faster or farther, but for people living with long-term effects of stroke, the real challenge is walking with better balance and consistency. This trial exists to see if real-time feedback about your body's movement during walking can help retrain your gait in ways that matter most for daily life.
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You will attend a single session lasting 60 minutes where you'll receive gait training—basically, walking practice with guidance. Half of participants will use the new kinematic biofeedback device, which tracks your hip movements and gives you real-time feedback to help you walk more evenly. The other half will receive standard gait training without the device. Either way, the goal is the same: help you improve the quality and consistency of your walking.
AI-generated summary from trial data · Jun 7, 2026 · Not medical advice
Taiwan