Abstract Background and aims Stroke rehabilitation is prolonged and resource-intensive, and accessible low-cost adjunctive therapies are limited. We evaluated whether adjunct natural sunlight exposure, compared with standard care alone, is safe and improves Stroke-Specific Quality of Life (SS-QoL) in patients with stroke Methods This prospective, randomized, open-label, blinded-endpoint (PROBE) trial was conducted at a tertiary neuroscience centre in New Delhi (Nov 2023–Apr 2025). Adults aged 18–80 years with recent moderate stroke (NIHSS 5–15 or intracerebral haemorrhage volume 30 mL) within 4 weeks were randomized 1:1 to adjunct sunlight therapy plus standard care or standard care alone. The intervention comprised 30 minutes of outdoor sunlight exposure on alternate days for 15 days (target ~10,000–25,000 lux). Outcome assessors were blinded. The primary efficacy outcome was change in SS-QoL from baseline to second follow-up (~2 months). The primary safety outcome was treatment-related adverse events. Analyses followed intention-to-treat principles. Results Of 212 screened patients, 40 were randomized (20 per group). Baseline characteristics were comparable, although SS-QoL was lower in the sunlight group. SS-QoL improved more with adjunct sunlight therapy than standard care (median change +60.5 vs +26.0; between-group median difference −34.0, 95% CI −51.0 to −11.0; p=0.012), supported by mean change analysis (p=0.013). Improvement was also observed at first follow-up. No treatment-related adverse events occurred. Two deaths (one per group) were unrelated to the intervention. Conclusions Adjunct natural sunlight therapy was safe and associated with improved SS-QoL after stroke. Larger multicentre trials are warranted to confirm efficacy Conflict of interest Shivam Mirg: nothing to disclose
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Shivam Mirg
All India Institute of Medical Sciences
Awadh Kishor Pandit
All India Institute of Medical Sciences
Deepti Vibha
All India Institute of Medical Sciences
European Stroke Journal
All India Institute of Medical Sciences
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Mirg et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69fd7ec6bfa21ec5bbf070f0 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/esj/aakag023.1538
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