Since your doctor has never even tried to get you to 100% recovery. Yes your doctor should be replaced with Dr. Watson. Because rehabilitation will continue to be a failure until you save billions of neurons in the first week by stopping
the 5 causes of the neuronal cascade of death in
the first week.
I lost 5.4 billion neurons in the first week because my doctor did nothing.
Because rehab only gets you almost fully recovered 10% of the time. So rehab is essentially a total failure and you are promoting more of that failure. You're focusing on completely the wrong part of stroke.
dr. Watson (52 posts to April 2012)
Exploring Stroke Rehabilitation in Malaysia: Are Robots Better than Humans for Stroke Recuperation?
Nik Nasihah Nik Ramli, Amhsavenii Asokan, Daniel
Mayakrishnan, Hariharasudan Annamalai
International Medical School, Management & Science University, Shah Alam,
Selangor, Malaysia
To cite this article: Nik Ramli NN, Asokan A, Mayakrishnan D, Annamalai H. Exploring stroke rehabilitation
in Malaysia: are robots better than humans for stroke recuperation? Malays J Med Sci. 2021;28(4):14–23.
https://doi.org/10.21315/mjms2021.28.4.3
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.21315/mjms2021.28.4.3
worldwide, stroke has become a global epidemic problem and burden. As a developing country,
Malaysia still faces challenges in providing ideal rehabilitation services to individuals with physical
disabilities including stroke survivors. Conventional post-stroke care is often delivered in a teambased approach and involves several disciplines, such as physical therapy, occupational therapy,
speech and language therapy, depending on the nature and severity of the deficits. Robots are
potential tools for stroke rehabilitation as they can enhance existing conventional therapy by
delivering a precise and consistent therapy of highly repetitive movements. In addition, robot assisted physiotherapy could facilitate the effectiveness of unsupervised rehabilitation and thus,
may reduce the cost and duration of therapist-assisted rehabilitation. Research on robot assisted
physiotherapy for stroke in Malaysia is slowly coming into the limelight in the past two decades.
This review explores the effectiveness of robot assisted physiotherapy particularly in improving
motor functions of stroke survivors in Malaysia.
Mayakrishnan, Hariharasudan Annamalai
International Medical School, Management & Science University, Shah Alam,
Selangor, Malaysia
To cite this article: Nik Ramli NN, Asokan A, Mayakrishnan D, Annamalai H. Exploring stroke rehabilitation
in Malaysia: are robots better than humans for stroke recuperation? Malays J Med Sci. 2021;28(4):14–23.
https://doi.org/10.21315/mjms2021.28.4.3
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.21315/mjms2021.28.4.3
Abstract
Ranked as the second leading cause of death and the primary factor to adult disabilityworldwide, stroke has become a global epidemic problem and burden. As a developing country,
Malaysia still faces challenges in providing ideal rehabilitation services to individuals with physical
disabilities including stroke survivors. Conventional post-stroke care is often delivered in a teambased approach and involves several disciplines, such as physical therapy, occupational therapy,
speech and language therapy, depending on the nature and severity of the deficits. Robots are
potential tools for stroke rehabilitation as they can enhance existing conventional therapy by
delivering a precise and consistent therapy of highly repetitive movements. In addition, robot assisted physiotherapy could facilitate the effectiveness of unsupervised rehabilitation and thus,
may reduce the cost and duration of therapist-assisted rehabilitation. Research on robot assisted
physiotherapy for stroke in Malaysia is slowly coming into the limelight in the past two decades.
This review explores the effectiveness of robot assisted physiotherapy particularly in improving
motor functions of stroke survivors in Malaysia.
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