Friday, September 6, 2013

Course of cognitive functioning during stroke rehabilitation

I think the first course of action your doctor should be doing is improve your cognition. You need to be smart enough to understand that you are totally screwed because your doctor can't help you recover at all.

Course of cognitive functioning during stroke rehabilitation


DOI:
10.1080/09602011.2013.821950
S. M. C. Rasquinab*, J. Weltera & C. M. van Heugtenc

Publishing models and article dates explained
Received: 1 May 2013
Published online: 02 Sep 2013
Article Views: 3

Abstract

The aim of the study was to determine the course of cognitive functioning within the subacute phase (< 4 months) after stroke during rehabilitation. Stroke patients admitted to a rehabilitation centre were submitted to a neuropsychological examination on admission (1 month post-stroke) and upon discharge (4 months post-stroke). Cognitive domains studied were attention, executive functioning, memory, and visual attention. Forty-two patients (mean age = 57.1 years; SD =  7.7) participated. At admission more than half of the patients showed deficits in attention and memory. Patients improved significantly on these domains; the largest improvement was seen in the domain of visual attention, while executive functioning did not improve significantly. A differential course of cognitive functioning was found in the subacute phase after stroke. The prognosis of visual attention is the most prominent.

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