I really don't believe in the use it or lose it meme. It is just a way for doctors and therapists to blame you for not following therapy instructions and thus not recovering. I think a huge part of this problem is because our doctors have not defined/diagnosed the dead vs. damaged areas. Because they haven't they have no clue which functions are possible to recover in the first 6 months. Therapists then assign lack of recovery to use it/lose it instead of the reality that the function might be in the dead brain area.
We need stroke medical professionals with at least a minimum of brains.
Use it and/or lose it—experience effects on brain remodeling across time after stroke
- 1Department of Psychology and Institute for Neuroscience, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA
- 2Department of Integrative Biology, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA
Introduction
Stroke is a leading cause of chronic disability worldwide (Johnston et al., 2009). Upper extremity (hand and arm) impairments are especially prevalent lasting post-stroke disabilities (Lai et al., 2002; Kwakkel et al., 2003).
Compensatory reliance on the nonparetic hand exacerbates impairments in
the paretic side by encouraging its disuse (i.e., “learned nonuse,” Taub et al., 2006).
Motor rehabilitative training (RT) approaches are the main tools for
treating these impairments, but they are typically insufficient to
normalize function. A better understanding of the mechanisms of RT
efficacy could help optimize its therapeutic potential.
Ischemic injury triggers prolonged periods of neuroanatomical reorganization (Li and Carmichael, 2006; Wieloch and Nikolich, 2006; Cheatwood et al., 2008). This reorganization unfolds over months or longer, but is particularly dynamic early after stroke (Anderson et al., 1986; Carmichael, 2006; Murphy and Corbett, 2009).
There are likely to be windows of opportunity for driving functionally
useful brain remodeling with RT, as well as windows of vulnerability for
promoting suboptimal neural changes. When is early enough? When is it
safe? What should be done in these windows? The answers to these
questions remain unclear. Considerable variability in neural remodeling
time courses can be expected between individuals and across brain
regions (e.g., Hsu and Jones, 2006; Krakauer, 2007; Riley et al., 2011).
Furthermore, earlier is not better for everything. Peri-infarct tissue
is vulnerable to use-dependent excitotoxicity in very early periods (Humm et al., 1998) and there is potential to ingrain maladaptive behavioral strategies (Allred and Jones, 2008a,b; Jones and Jefferson, 2011).
Motor RT relies on mechanisms of skill learning, as does
compensatory learning with the nonparetic hand. In intact brains, manual
skill learning depends on practice-dependent synaptic structural and
functional reorganization of motor cortex (Monfils et al., 2005; Kleim et al., 2006; Xu et al., 2009; Dayan and Cohen, 2011).
These learning mechanisms are likely to interact with regenerative
responses to stroke, many elements of which are sensitive to behavioral
manipulations, as reviewed previously (Jones and Adkins, 2010).
Optimally timing and tailoring RT requires a better understanding of
how it interacts with post-stroke remodeling processes as they unfold
over time. Below we review a framework for understanding these
interactions, progress in unraveling them and ongoing knowledge gaps
surrounding time-sensitivities for experience-driven plasticity after
stroke.
Much more at link.
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