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
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Managing the severely impaired arm after stroke: a mixed-methods study with qualitative emphasis
TL;DR: Understanding about how individuals manage their severely impaired upper limb is extended and can be used to inform a novel stroke self-management intervention.
Dose, Content, and Context of Usual Care in Stroke Upper Limb Motor Interventions: A Systematic Review.
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors describe the current dose and content of usual care upper limb motor intervention for inpatients following stroke and examine if context factors alter the dose and the content.
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Permeability of the blood-brain barrier through the phases of ischaemic stroke and relation with clinical outcome: protocol for a systematic review
TL;DR: This systematic review will aim to comprehensively summarise the existing evidence regarding the evolution of the BBBP values during the different phases of an acute ischaemic stroke and correlate this event with the clinical outcome of the patient.
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Immunomodulatory approaches after experimental ischemic stroke
Jenni Anttila
- 20 Mar 2020
TL;DR: It is found that MANF protein expression is strongly induced in activated immune cells in the infarcted rodent and human brains and this work broadens knowledge of the post-stroke neuroinflammation and secondary pathology of the thalamus in the corticalinfarct area.
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Are changes in upper extremity use during sub-acute rehabilitation after stroke associated with physical, cognitive, and social activities? An observational cohort pilot study.
TL;DR: The findings suggest that the use of the affected upper extremity and a general increase in activity are associated with overall recovery, and facilitating both general physical activity and specific upper extremities use at a rehabilitation ward may benefit overall recovery.
5
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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