You mean that you missed the Margaret Yekutiel book about this from 2001, 'Sensory Re-Education of the Hand After Stroke'? And still didn't write a protocol on how to do this? How long do stroke survivors have to put up with such fucking incompetency?
The effectiveness of somatosensory retraining for improving sensory function in the arm following stroke: a systematic review
Turville ML, et al. Clin Rehabil. 2019.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE::
The aim of this study was to evaluate if somatosensory
retraining programmes assist people to improve somatosensory
discrimination skills and arm functioning after stroke.
DATA SOURCES::
Nine databases were systematically searched: Medline,
Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, PsychInfo,
Embase, Amed, Web of Science, Physiotherapy Evidence Database, OT
seeker, and Cochrane Library.
REVIEW METHODS::
Studies were included for review if they involved (1) adult
participants who had somatosensory impairment in the arm after stroke,
(2) a programme targeted at retraining somatosensation, (3) a primary
measure of somatosensory discrimination skills in the arm, and (4) an
intervention study design (e.g. randomized or non-randomized control
designs).
RESULTS::
A total of 6779 articles were screened. Five group trials
and five single case experimental designs were included ( N = 199 stroke
survivors). Six studies focused exclusively on retraining
somatosensation and four studies focused on somatosensation and motor
retraining. Standardized somatosensory measures were typically used for
tactile, proprioception, and haptic object recognition modalities.
Sensory intervention effect sizes ranged from 0.3 to 2.2, with an
average effect size of 0.85 across somatosensory modalities. A majority
of effect sizes for proprioception and tactile somatosensory domains
were greater than 0.5, and all but one of the intervention effect sizes
were larger than the control effect sizes, at least as point estimates.
Six studies measured motor and/or functional arm outcomes ( n = 89
participants), with narrative analysis suggesting a trend towards
improvement in arm use after somatosensory retraining.
CONCLUSION::
Somatosensory retraining may assist people to regain somatosensory discrimination skills in the arm after stroke.
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