Plain-English translation of NCT06772194 on ClinicalTrials.gov ↗ · Source last updated · Translation generated · How we translate trials
Read our Stroke research guide →This is a research study that follows 2,000 stroke patients in Taiwan for one year after their stroke. Researchers want to understand how stroke affects different parts of daily life—including movement, swallowing, memory, mood, and overall quality of life—and to learn what factors help some people recover better than others.
Stroke can affect many different areas of a person's life and recovery in ways that aren't yet fully understood in Taiwan's population. By studying a large group of stroke patients over time, researchers hope to better predict who will struggle most after stroke and how to help people recover.
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You would visit the hospital or clinic three times over one year: around 1–4 weeks after your stroke, again at 3 months, and again at 12 months. At each visit, you'll answer questions and complete short tests about movement, memory, mood, and daily activities (about 40 minutes per visit), give blood samples, and have brain imaging scans at the first and final visits. The study is purely observational—you're not taking any new medication, just sharing information about how you're recovering.
AI-generated summary from trial data · Jul 4, 2026 · Not medical advice
Taiwan