Friday, May 17, 2013

An evidence-based review of cognitive rehabilitation in medical conditions affecting cognitive function

I would think that cognition would be the first thing worked on after stroke but thats just me.
Your doctor may think that should be the last because you wouldn't want anybody questioning the medical protocols that don't exist for stroke.
http://search.naric.com/research/rehab/redesign_record.cfm?search=2&type=all&criteria=J65493&phrase=no&rec=120804
NARIC Accession Number: J65493.  What's this?
ISSN: 0003-9993.
Author(s): Langenbahn, Donna M.; Ashman, Teresa; Cantor, Joshua; Trott, Charlotte.
Publication Year: 2013.
Number of Pages: 16.
Abstract: This review examined evidence for the efficacy of cognitive rehabilitation in individuals diagnosed with medical conditions known to affect cognitive function, and formulated evidence-based recommendations for clinical practice based on that evidence. Ovid Medline and PubMed databases were searched using the terms cognition, cognitive, crossed with the terms rehabilitation, remediation, retraining, training, crossed with 11 medical diagnostic categories. Articles through December 2008 were accessed, resulting in 2,284 abstracts. A total of 211 articles were selected from the initial abstract review. These articles were then assessed by committee members using 9 exclusion and 3 inclusion criteria. A total of 34 remaining articles were submitted to full review. Articles were reviewed under diagnostic categories using specific criteria recorded on structured data sheets. Classification was performed according to guidelines of the American Academy of Neurology, with agreement between 2 committee members necessary for final decisions. Of the 34 studies fully evaluated, 1 was rated as class I, 6 as class II, 2 as class III, and 25 as class IV. Evidence within each diagnostic area was synthesized for the formulation of Practice Standards, Practice Guidelines, and Practice Options, as possible. Two clinical practice recommendations were advanced, 1 each in the diagnostic areas of brain neoplasms and epilepsy/seizure disorders. Discussion included comments on the research status of the effectiveness of cognitive rehabilitation for cognitive deficits related to these medical conditions, as well as suggestions for future directions in research.

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