I got nothing useful out of this, generic blathering.
Survivors of chronic stroke experience continued impairment of dexterity but not strength in the nonparetic upper limb
Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation — Barry AJ, et al. | March 25, 2020
targeting
the nonparetic upper limb for rehabilitation was recommended.(Useless, we need specifics, not this generic crapola.)
Researchers assessed the performance of the less affected upper
limb among individuals with stroke relative to normative values. They
evaluated less affected upper limb function among those whose prestroke
dominant limb became paretic and those whose prestroke nondominant limb
became paretic in this cohort analysis of survivors of chronic stroke
(7.2 ± 6.7y post incident). Even years post-stroke, significant upper
extremity impairment in the nominally nonparetic limb was identified
among survivors of stroke with severe impairment of the paretic limb,
irrespective of whether the dominant hand or nondominant hand was
primarily affected. Since this group of survivors of stroke particularly
rely on the nonparetic limb for performing functional tasks,
Read the full article on Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
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