Wrong title; it is treating functional neurological disorder NOT stroke. You can read about actual hypnotherapy for stroke here:
hypnotherapy (4 posts)
So functional neurological disorder is defined here:
Functional neurological disorder (FND) is a medical condition in which
there is a problem with the functioning of the nervous system and how
the brain and body sends and/or receives signals, rather than a
structural disease process such as multiple sclerosis or stroke. FND can
encompass a wide variety of neurological symptoms, such as limb
weakness or seizures.
The use of hypnotherapy as treatment for functional stroke: A case series from a single center in the UK
Abstract
Functional neurological disorder is defined by symptoms not explained by the current model of disease and its pathophysiology. It is found in 8.4% of patients presenting as acute stroke. Treatment is difficult and recurrence rates are high. We introduced hypnotherapy as a therapeutic option in addition to standard stroke unit care.
Methods
This is an observational study of successive patients with functional neurological disorder presenting as acute stroke treated with hypnotherapy between 1 April 2014 and 1 February 2018. The diagnosis of functional neurological disorder was confirmed by clinical examination and computed tomography/magnetic resonance imaging. Hypnosis was delivered by a hypnotherapy trained stroke physician using imagery for induction. A positive response was defined as a National Institutes of Health Stroke score reduction to 0 or by ≥4 points posthypnotherapy. Costs were calculated as therapist time and benefits as reduction in disability/bed days.
Results
Sixty-eight patients (mean age 36.4 years, 52 (76%) females, mean baseline National Institutes of Health Stroke 5.0 (range 1–9)) were included. Two patients (3%) could not be hypnotized. Fifty-eight 58 (85%) responded, 47 (81%) required one treatment session, while 19% needed up to three sessions for symptomatic improvement. No adverse events were observed. Disability (modified Rankin Scale) reduced from a mean of 2.3 to 0.5 resulting in an average cost saving of £1,658 per patient. Most (n = 50, 86%) remained well without recurrence at six-month follow-up.
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