Then write this up as a
stroke protocol AND DELIVER IT to all 10 million yearly stroke survivors now and into the future.
This printed research article is only the start of your job since we have fucking failures of stroke associations you can't dump the followup on them.
The latest here:
Repetitive peripheral magnetic stimulation improves severe upper limb paresis in early acute phase stroke survivors
NeuroRehabilitation , Volume 46(4) , Pgs. 569-575.
NARIC Accession Number: J84280. What's this?
ISSN: 1053-8135.
Author(s): Obayashi, Shigeru ; Takahashi, Rina.
Publication Year: 2020.
Number of Pages: 7.
Abstract: Study investigated the effects of repetitive peripheral magnetic stimulation (rPMS) on severe upper-extremity (UE) paresis during early acute phase of stroke. Nineteen participants with severe UE disability met the criteria. Ten subjects received 15–20 minutes of rPMS prior to standard care per session, while 9 age- and severity-matched subjects received two 20-minute sessions of standard care. Outcome measures included UE motor section of the Fugl-Meyer Motor Assessment Scale (FMA-UE), Wolf Motor Function Test (WMFT), and Box and Block Test (BBT). The rPMS group received treatment (average sessions: 7.8) after a median 9.2 days from stroke (16.5 sessions after 5 days for control). To adjust the different treatment durations, “progress rate” was defined as the gains of UE function scores divided by treatment duration. The progress rate was significantly different in FMA-UE and WMFT, but not in BBT. The findings suggest beneficial effects of rPMS on severe UE paresis during early acute phase of stroke.
Descriptor Terms: ACUTE CARE, EARLY INTERVENTION, ELECTRICAL STIMULATION, LIMBS, MOTOR SKILLS, PARALYSIS, STROKE.
Can this document be ordered through NARIC's document delivery service*?: Y.
Get this Document: https://content.iospress.com/articles/neurorehabilitation/nre203085.
Citation: Obayashi, Shigeru , Takahashi, Rina. (2020). Repetitive peripheral magnetic stimulation improves severe upper limb paresis in early acute phase stroke survivors. NeuroRehabilitation , 46(4), Pgs. 569-575. Retrieved 9/19/2020, from REHABDATA database.
NARIC Accession Number: J84280. What's this?
ISSN: 1053-8135.
Author(s): Obayashi, Shigeru ; Takahashi, Rina.
Publication Year: 2020.
Number of Pages: 7.
Abstract: Study investigated the effects of repetitive peripheral magnetic stimulation (rPMS) on severe upper-extremity (UE) paresis during early acute phase of stroke. Nineteen participants with severe UE disability met the criteria. Ten subjects received 15–20 minutes of rPMS prior to standard care per session, while 9 age- and severity-matched subjects received two 20-minute sessions of standard care. Outcome measures included UE motor section of the Fugl-Meyer Motor Assessment Scale (FMA-UE), Wolf Motor Function Test (WMFT), and Box and Block Test (BBT). The rPMS group received treatment (average sessions: 7.8) after a median 9.2 days from stroke (16.5 sessions after 5 days for control). To adjust the different treatment durations, “progress rate” was defined as the gains of UE function scores divided by treatment duration. The progress rate was significantly different in FMA-UE and WMFT, but not in BBT. The findings suggest beneficial effects of rPMS on severe UE paresis during early acute phase of stroke.
Descriptor Terms: ACUTE CARE, EARLY INTERVENTION, ELECTRICAL STIMULATION, LIMBS, MOTOR SKILLS, PARALYSIS, STROKE.
Can this document be ordered through NARIC's document delivery service*?: Y.
Get this Document: https://content.iospress.com/articles/neurorehabilitation/nre203085.
Citation: Obayashi, Shigeru , Takahashi, Rina. (2020). Repetitive peripheral magnetic stimulation improves severe upper limb paresis in early acute phase stroke survivors. NeuroRehabilitation , 46(4), Pgs. 569-575. Retrieved 9/19/2020, from REHABDATA database.
No comments:
Post a Comment