Background: anxiety has a high prevalence in stroke patients and can dampen recovery of motor and cognitive impairment. Psychotropic medication can induce cognitive side effects, while psychotherapy and mindfulness-based stress reduction programs can be difficult to implement and are demanding for patients. Aim: to evaluate the effect of a virtual reality (VR)-based medical device (HypnoVR®) on anxiety and stress reduction in patients with chronic stroke. Other outcomes, including depression, neurological fatigue and quality of life will be assessed. Methodology: a randomized controlled trial including patients who had an ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke (\>6 months) and experience significant anxiety - Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) ≥ 8 for anxiety. Intervention includes 3 weekly HypnoVR® sessions for 3 weeks (total: 9), with clinical assessments at baseline, post-intervention (end of week 3) and at a 8-week follow-up. The sessions will be supervised by a research assistant and will take place in our outpatient clinic. Participants will be randomly assigned to either an immediate treatment group or a delayed treatment group (waiting list), the latter acting as both controls and active participants. Potential significance: VR-based therapeutic interventions are emerging as promising solutions to improve mental health but require solid scientific studies to assess their efficacy. This study provides a safe, non-invasive intervention for all included participants and could unveil its potential as an adjunctive therapy for mental health issues after stroke.
Age range
18 Years
Sex
ALL
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HAD-Anxiety
Timeframe: From enrollment to the end of the intervention (end of week 3)