Agreed definitions and a shared vision for new standards in stroke recovery research: The Stroke Recovery and Rehabilitation Roundtable taskforce:
Julie Bernhardt,Kathryn S Hayward,Kathryn S Hayward,Gert Kwakkel,Gert Kwakkel,Nick S. Ward,Steven L. Wolf,Karen Borschmann,John W. Krakauer,Lara A. Boyd,S. Thomas Carmichael,Dale Corbett,Dale Corbett,Steven C. Cramer +13 more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Physiological responses and perceived exertion during robot-assisted treadmill walking in non-ambulatory stroke survivors.
Nina Lefeber,Emma De Keersmaecker,Stieven Henderix,Marc Michielsen,Federica Tamburella,Nevio Luigi Tagliamonte,Marco Molinari,Bas de Geus,Eric Kerckhofs,Eva Swinnen +9 more
TL;DR: The assistance level that non-ambulatory stroke survivors require at their highest tolerable walking speed seems too high to sufficiently stress the cardiorespiratory system during robot-assisted treadmill walking.
13
Functional electrical stimulation compared with ankle-foot orthosis in subacute post stroke patients with foot drop: A pilot study.
TL;DR: The findings suggest that FES is at least as effective as traditional AFO and may be more so in patients following a subacute post stroke with foot drop treated with AFO or FES.
13
Classification of functional and non-functional arm use by inertial measurement units in individuals with upper limb impairment after stroke
Johannes Pohl,Alain Ryser,Janne M. Veerbeek,Geert Verheyden,Julia E. Vogt,Andreas R. Luft,Christopher Awai Easthope +6 more
TL;DR: A machine learning classifier is developed and validated for this task and compared it to methods using conventional and optimal thresholds to compare the validity of methods classifying stroke survivors’ real-life arm activities measured by wrist-worn sensors excluding whole-body movements.
Validation of the Spanish version of the Oxford Cognitive Screen (S-OCS): psychometric properties of a short cognitive stroke-specific screening tool:
Desirée Valera-Gran,Sofía López-Roig,Miriam Hurtado-Pomares,Paula Peral-Gómez,María García-Manzanares,Marta Sunyer Catlla,Gemma Más Sesé,Eva María Navarrete-Muñoz,Alicia Sánchez-Pérez +8 more
TL;DR: The findings support that the Spanish version of the Oxford Cognitive Screen is a reliable and valid tool for screening cognitive impairments in subacute stroke patients.
13
Repeated Measures of Modified Rankin Scale Scores to Assess Functional Recovery From Stroke: AFFINITY Study Findings
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors compared repeated-measures and single-measure analyses of the modified Rankin Scale (mRS) from a randomized clinical trial and found that 95% of participants experienced a reduction in mRS after 12 months.
13
References
Mechanisms of brain injury after intracerebral haemorrhage
TL;DR: The coagulation cascade, haemoglobin breakdown products, and inflammation all play a part in ICH-induced injury and could provide new therapeutic targets and new therapeutic interventions for this severe form of stroke.
1.3K
Recovery of upper extremity function in stroke patients: The Copenhagen stroke study
TL;DR: A valid prognosis of UE function can be made within 3 and 6 weeks in patients with mild and severe UE paresis, respectively, and a valid prediction should not be expected after 6 and 11 weeks respectively, in these groups of patients.
1K
The restoration of motor function following hemiplegia in man
TL;DR: There was a remarkable uniformity in the sequences of recovery of all patients, regardless of whether sensory disturbances were present and whether the dominant or nondominant hemisphere was involved; the patients progressed from one recovery phase to the next in an orderly fashion without any of the phases being omitted.
954
What Do Motor “Recovery” and “Compensation” Mean in Patients Following Stroke?
TL;DR: This Point of View describes the problem and offers a solution in the form of definitions of compensation and recovery at the neuronal, motor performance, and functional levels within the framework of the International Classification of Functioning model.
890
Aphasia in acute stroke: incidence, determinants, and recovery.
Palle Møller Pedersen,Henrik Stig Jørgensen,Hirofumi Nakayama,Hans Otto Raaschou,Tom Skyhøj Olsen +4 more
TL;DR: Sex, handedness, and side of stroke lesion were not independent outcome predictors, and the influence of age was minimal, but a valid prognosis of aphasia could be made within 1 to 4 weeks after the stroke depending on the initial severity.
Related Papers (5)
Carolee J. Winstein,Joel M. Stein,Ross Arena,Barbara E. Bates,Leora R. Cherney,Steven C. Cramer,Frank DeRuyter,Janice J. Eng,Beth E. Fisher,Richard L. Harvey,Catherine E. Lang,Marilyn MacKay-Lyons,Kenneth J. Ottenbacher,Sue Pugh,Mathew J. Reeves,Lorie Richards,William Stiers,Richard D. Zorowitz +17 more