Chinese Journal of Rehabilitation Theory and Practice ›› 2024, Vol. 30 ›› Issue (9): 1034-1042.doi: 10.3969/j.issn.1006-9771.2024.09.006

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Application of cognitive-motor dual-task training in stroke: a bibliometrics analysis

ZHANG Lu1,2a, MA Jiangping1,2a, YANG Erli2a, CHEN Qiuhua1, DONG Lijun1, YIN Xiaobing2b()   

  1. 1. Medical College of Tongji University, Shanghai 200082, China
    2. a. Department of Neurology; b. Nursing Department, the Tenth People's Hospital of Tongji University, Shanghai 200072, China
  • Received:2024-06-03 Revised:2024-08-23 Published:2024-09-25 Online:2024-10-15
  • Contact: YIN Xiaobing, E-mail: yinxiaobing@hotmail.com
  • Supported by:
    Shanghai Shenkang Hospital Development Centre Municipal Hospital Diagnosis and Treatment Technology Promotion and Optimal Management Project(SHDC22022223);Shanghai Shenkang Hospital Development Centre Municipal Hospital Diagnosis and Treatment Technology Promotion and Optimal Management Project(SHDC22023243)

Abstract:

Objective To analyze the current status and frontier trends of research on the application of cognitive-motor dual task training (CMDT) in stroke.
Methods Relevant literatures on the application of CMDT in stroke were retrieved from CNKI, Wanfang data, VIP, SinoMed and Web of Science Core Collection from inception to October 11, 2023, and was analyzed with CiteSpace 6.2R4.
Results A total of 285 articles were included with 124 in Chinese and 161 in English. The annual number of publications showed a general upward trend. United States, Canada, Netherlands, China and United Kingdom were the leading countries in terms of output in English. The scholar with the most publications in Chinese was Zheng Jiejiao, and the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine in Huadong Hospital of Fudan University was the leading institution for Chinese publications. Vrije University Amsterdam was the leading institution for English publications. The most frequent Chinese keywords were gait, falls, balance, cognition and postural control. The most frequent English keywords were dual-task, walking, gait, balance and cognitive-motor interference. Bursting keywords from the past two years included gait training, cognitive tasks, balance ability and cognitive-motor interference.
Conclusion The researches on the application of CMDT in stroke are on the rise, with hotspots including gait training, cognitive tasks and cognitive-motor interference. The mechanisms of CMDT and the development of optimal CMDT rehabilitation protocols for stroke may be researched more in the future.

Key words: stroke, cognitive-motor dual-task training, bibliometrics

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