Changing stroke rehab and research worldwide now.Time is Brain! trillions and trillions of neurons that DIE each day because there are NO effective hyperacute therapies besides tPA(only 12% effective). I have 523 posts on hyperacute therapy, enough for researchers to spend decades proving them out. These are my personal ideas and blog on stroke rehabilitation and stroke research. Do not attempt any of these without checking with your medical provider. Unless you join me in agitating, when you need these therapies they won't be there.

What this blog is for:

My blog is not to help survivors recover, it is to have the 10 million yearly stroke survivors light fires underneath their doctors, stroke hospitals and stroke researchers to get stroke solved. 100% recovery. The stroke medical world is completely failing at that goal, they don't even have it as a goal. Shortly after getting out of the hospital and getting NO information on the process or protocols of stroke rehabilitation and recovery I started searching on the internet and found that no other survivor received useful information. This is an attempt to cover all stroke rehabilitation information that should be readily available to survivors so they can talk with informed knowledge to their medical staff. It lays out what needs to be done to get stroke survivors closer to 100% recovery. It's quite disgusting that this information is not available from every stroke association and doctors group.

Sunday, August 9, 2020

2009 - The Effectiveness of the Bobath Concept in Stroke

Why hasn't Bobath been shitcanned since 2003? This research in 2009 just shows you how fucking out-of-date the mentors and senior researchers are.  They should be allowed nowhere near stroke research after approving this to go ahead.

My best therapist supposedly used it but I really think her competence came from her knowledge of anatomy.

Physiotherapy Based on the Bobath Concept for Adults with Post-Stroke Hemiplegia: A Review of Effectiveness Studies 2003

The latest waste of time here:

2009 - The Effectiveness of the Bobath Concept in Stroke

What is the Evidence?
Originally publishedhttps://doi.org/10.1161/STROKEAHA.108.533828Stroke. 2009;40:e89–e97

Abstract

Background and Purpose— In the Western world, the Bobath Concept or neurodevelopmental treatment is the most popular treatment approach used in stroke rehabilitation, yet the superiority of the Bobath Concept as the optimal type of treatment has not been established. This systematic review of randomized, controlled trials aimed to evaluate the available evidence for the effectiveness of the Bobath Concept in stroke rehabilitation.

Method— A systematic literature search was conducted in the bibliographic databases MEDLINE and CENTRAL (March 2008) and by screening the references of selected publications (including reviews). Studies in which the effects of the Bobath Concept were investigated were classified into the following domains: sensorimotor control of upper and lower limb; sitting and standing, balance control, and dexterity; mobility; activities of daily living; health-related quality of life; and cost-effectiveness. Due to methodological heterogeneity within the selected studies, statistical pooling was not considered. Two independent researchers rated all retrieved literature according to the Physiotherapy Evidence Database (PEDro) scale from which a best evidence synthesis was derived to determine the strength of the evidence for both effectiveness of the Bobath Concept and for its superiority over other approaches.

Results— The search strategy initially identified 2263 studies. After selection based on predetermined criteria, finally, 16 studies involving 813 patients with stroke were included for further analysis. There was no evidence of superiority of Bobath on sensorimotor control of upper and lower limb, dexterity, mobility, activities of daily living, health-related quality of life, and cost-effectiveness. Only limited evidence was found for balance control in favor of Bobath. Because of the limited evidence available, no best evidence synthesis was applied for the health-related quality-of-life domain and cost-effectiveness.

Conclusions— This systematic review confirms that overall the Bobath Concept is not superior to other approaches. Based on best evidence synthesis, no evidence is available for the superiority of any approach. This review has highlighted many methodological shortcomings in the studies reviewed; further high-quality trials need to be published. Evidence-based guidelines rather than therapist preference should serve as a framework from which therapists should derive the most effective treatment.

Before the introduction of neurophysiological approaches to rehabilitation, patients with central nervous system damage were re-educated using both a compensatory and an orthopedic approach consisting of stretching, bracing, and strengthening the affected side and teaching the patient to rely more heavily on the unaffected side to become as independent as possible.1 Concomitant with advances in motor control and neurosciences of the last decades went the development of new innovative interventions for neurologically impaired patients. One of these approaches is the Bobath Concept, which was last published by Bertha and Karl Bobath in 1990.2 Bobath explained movement dysfunction in hemiplegia from a neurophysiological perspective stating that the patient must be active while the therapist assists the patient to move using key points of control and reflex-inhibiting patterns.2 Since 1984, the Bobaths conceded that reflexes were not primitive responses, but essential reactions to support movement; as a consequence, the missing components of the normal developmental sequence were no longer facilitated during Bobath therapy in either adults or children.3 It is thus unfortunate that the Bobath Concept is still referred to as NeuroDevelopmental Treatment (NDT) in the American literature because it was originally based on facilitating the missing components of the normal developmental sequence in children with cerebral palsy. More than 50 years later, this treatment approach that is based on their revolutionary ideas has become the most popular approach for the treatment of neurologically impaired patients in the Western world.4

In the past 2 decades, a better understanding has developed of the underlying mechanisms that are responsible for motor learning5 and functional recovery after stroke.6 Recent studies suggest that different mechanisms are involved in generating the nonlinear pattern of neurological recovery after stroke. These mechanisms include: (1) salvation of penumbral tissue surrounding the infarcted area; (2) elevation of cerebral shock (ie, “elevation of diaschisis”); and (3) the ability of the brain to adapt by neuroplasticity. These mechanisms are not independent from each other, but are likely highly interrelated. For example, neurons that are anatomically related to the infarcted area, that is in the process of recovering from a suppressive state, can restore their function by inducing plastic changes such as receptor hypersensitivity and dendritic growth of new interneuronal pathways. Recent studies also suggest that mechanisms of experience-dependent plasticity are further enhanced by exercise training.7 This relationship is subject to a dose-response increase, ie, more intense training leads to a better response.8 However, there is also a growing body of evidence that functional recovery entails more than just the restitution of body functions. In particular, recent longitudinal studies that examined human kinematics showed that improvement in dexterity and gait is to a large extent based on the use of compensatory movement strategies by which patients learn to deal with existing deficits.6

As a result of this gradual accumulation of scientific knowledge, the Bobath Concept has evolved into its current form by selectively incorporating this knowledge.9–12 The International Bobath Instructors Training Association (IBITA) defines the current Bobath Concept as a problem-solving approach to the assessment and treatment of individuals with disturbances of function, movement, and postural control due to a lesion of the central nervous system; the association clearly states that the Bobath Concept aims to identify and analyze problems within functional activities and participation in everyday life as well as the analysis of movement components and underlying impairments.12 The British Bobath Tutors’ Association (BBTA) supports this view that although the Bobath Concept targets both impairments and functional activities, successful goal acquisition in a given task must be practiced to improve efficiency of movement and promote generalization in everyday life.11 These main adaptations to current Bobath practice concur with the evidence base for applying exercise therapy at a functional level and preferably in the patient’s own environment, because the effects of impairment-focused training rarely generalize to activities that are not directly trained in the treatment program and also that these generated effects are context-dependent.13–15

In the past decade, the theoretical assumptions underlying the Bobath Concept have been subject to criticism1,4,16; despite its popularity, the Bobath Concept has never been proven to be superior to alternative treatment approaches.17 Although 2 systematic reviews have specifically examined the effectiveness of Bobath-based therapy reviewing papers up to 200118 and 2003,16 in light of the growing number of randomized, controlled trials, the improved understanding of mechanisms underlying adaptive motor relearning and mechanisms of functional recovery after stroke and the different policies to deal with the lack of evidence for the efficacy of Bobath therapy, we have systematically evaluated the evidence for the effectiveness of the Bobath Concept in stroke rehabilitation when compared with alternative approaches in terms of outcome of: (1) sensorimotor control of the upper and lower paretic limb; (2) balance control; (3) dexterity; (4) mobility; (5) activities of daily living (ADLs); (6) health-related quality of life (HRQOL); and (7) cost-effectiveness.


 

 

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