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Time since injury limits but does not prevent improvement and maintenance of gains in balance in chronic stroke. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to explore how long it has been since a stroke affects the success and sustainability of balance rehabilitation.
  • Forty-seven participants were divided into groups based on the time since their stroke, and they underwent a structured training regimen combining physical therapy and visual feedback exercises for balance improvement.
  • Results showed that those who had suffered strokes longer than 24 months struggled to show improvements and maintain gains, indicating that the timing of rehabilitation needs to be tailored to individual recovery stages post-stroke.

Article Abstract

Objective: To determine the influence of time since injury on the efficacy and maintenance of gains of rehabilitation of balance after stroke.

Method: Forty-seven participants were assigned to a least (6-12 months), a moderate (12-24 months), or a most chronic (>24 months) group. Participants trained for 20 one-hour sessions, administered three to five times a week, combining conventional physical therapy and visual feedback-based exercises that trained the ankle and hip strategies. Participants were assessed before, after the intervention, and one month later with a posturography test (Sway Speed and Limits of Stability) and clinical scales.

Results: In contrast to other subjects, the most chronic participants failed to improve their sway and to maintain the benefits detected in the Limits of Stability after the intervention. Although all the participants improved in those clinical tests that better matched the trained skills, time since injury limited the improvement, and over all, the maintenance of gains.

Conclusion: Time since injury limits but does not prevent improvement in chronic stages post-stroke, and this effect appears to be more pronounced with maintaining gains. These findings support that training duration and intensity as well as type of therapy may need to be adjusted based on time post-stroke.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02699052.2017.1418905DOI Listing

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