Traditional stroke rehabilitation therapy focuses on restoring strength and movement to the more impaired side of the body, ...
A novel arm-training approach in chronic stroke may shift rehab focus to the ipsilesional limb, challenging traditional approaches.
An at-home brain-computer interface improves upper limb motor function in patients with chronic stroke, suggesting a new avenue for long-term neurorehabilitation.
News Medical on MSN
High-dose motor therapy improves outcomes after perinatal stroke
In infants and toddlers who had a stroke before birth or as a newborn (28 days or younger), a treatment that combined ...
For chronic stroke with severe paresis, ipsilesional motor performance may be significantly improved with targeted ipsilesional arm training.
For years, stroke rehabilitation has focused mainly on the more impaired side of the body. But a new study published in JAMA ...
For infants and toddlers who have had a stroke, a new treatment that restricted the use of their stronger arm and hand to encourage them to use their stroke-affected arm and hand, combined with ...
A stroke occurs when the flow of oxygen-carrying blood to part of the brain is interrupted by a blockage in a blood vessel or ...
But that good arm can be strengthened. In our newly published research in the journal JAMA Neurology, we found that training the less-impaired arm in people living with chronic stroke can improve ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results