This letter to the editor should have referenced that Bobath should have been shitcanned since 2003! Physiotherapy Based on the Bobath Concept for Adults with Post-Stroke Hemiplegia: A Review of Effectiveness Studies 2003
And the idiotic reference to the ridiculous opinion of Dr. William M. Landau?
Spasticity After Stroke: Why Bother? Aug. 2004)
The latest here:
Potential effectiveness of three different treatment approaches to improve minimal to moderate arm and hand function after stroke - a pilot randomized clinical trial
Clinical Rehabilitation
26(8) 758–760
© The Author(s) 2012
Reprints and permissions:
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DOI: 10.1177/0269215512441758
cre.sagepub.com
Re: ‘Potential effectiveness of three
different treatment approaches to
improve minimal to moderate arm
and hand function after stroke-a pilot
randomized controlled clinical trial’
We read with interest the article of three different
approaches to improve arm and hand function.
1
The
study confirms the difficulty in doing clinical studies
on conditions in stroke rehabilitation. It is not easy
to get samples big enough to do research on specific
problems in treatment. On the other hand, the study
is also an example of trying to prove too many things
in one sample. As we understand it the authors
wanted to see if the treatment approaches were feasible within this patient group. Why? Two of the
treatment methods are used regularly (conventional
and constraint-induced movement therapy) and have
been explored in other studies. Having two main
outcomes and three arms makes it difficult to power,
and it is not clear if a power analysis was performed
beforehand. A pilot with two arms would probably
have greater power to show change between groups.
One of the new and exciting treatment approaches
in this study was therapeutic climbing which actually
was the one of interest. This could have preferably
been investigated in a two-arm study. The study
would probably have gained more power to conclude
on possible effects if this approach had been chosen.
The message in this pilot study is that any therapy is better than no therapy in maintaining arm and
hand function. And since one of the criteria for
including patients in the study was ‘no shoulder
pain’ one can assume that constraint-induced movement therapy was the therapy that imposed least
shoulder pain. This is in contrast to the clinical message presented on p. 1040.
However, when reading the article we were once
again surprised by the notion that conventional neurological therapy is presented as a form of synthesized Bobath methodology: ‘spasticity prevents
economic and effective movement and therefore
must be controlled. The classical aspects of symmetry, posture and inhibition of ineffective synergistic movements characterize this treatment
approach’.
1
And to make it more accepted it is stated
that ‘this is complemented by functional task-
oriented treatment strategies’, as if this is the
optional way to treat stroke patients.
It seems as if things are back to normal and that
we have not moved an inch from the days before our
study Bobath or Motor Relearning. In a comparison
of two different approaches of physiotherapy in
stroke rehabilitation – a randomized controlled
study
2
– we showed that it was not necessary to pay
so much attention to ‘the classical aspects of symmetry, posture and inhibition of ineffective synergistic movements’ but that you could actually go
straight to task-oriented exercises. It seems as if this
conventional approach is accepted in some clinics,
although it is not the optimal approach. The
described approach contains all the old-fashioned
ways that are not necessary to enhance motor func-
tion and it seems an awful waste of therapy time to
do all this preparations for something that is not
necessary. And little time is left to do the effective
part of treatment, namely task-oriented exercises!
Furthermore, other studies have shown that spasticity is not a major problem in therapy for stroke(WHAT A BUNCH OF FUCKING BULLSHIT! You'll change your mind when you have spasticity from your stroke!)
and when it is spasticity rarely increases with exercises, rather the contrary.
3–5
So how is it that this
Bobath method has now been reborn as ‘conventional therapy approaches’ and that meta-analyses
such as the one by Kollen et al.
6
are used to sanctify
these standpoints?
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