Less-impaired arm training speeds everyday hand function after stroke

TL;DR Summary
A randomized trial of more than 50 chronic stroke patients found that training the less-impaired arm for five weeks improved everyday hand tasks more than training the most-impaired arm, with gains persisting for six months, suggesting a positive feedback loop where better arm function leads to more use and further improvement.
Topics:health#health#neurorehabilitation#physical-therapy#stroke-recovery#stroke-rehabilitation#virtual-reality
- Study Reveals an Unexpected Way to Boost Recovery After a Stroke ScienceAlert
- A new approach to stroke rehab — and more medical headlines WGN-TV
- Targeting the 'good' arm after stroke leads to better motor skills Penn State University
- Stroke telerehabilitation emerges as promising primer for recovery EurekAlert!
- Stroke Rehab Focused On 'Good' Arm Shows Better Results, Trial Finds U.S. News & World Report
Reading Insights
Total Reads
1
Unique Readers
11
Time Saved
5 min
vs 6 min read
Condensed
95%
1,034 → 51 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on ScienceAlert