Tuesday, April 15, 2025

Efficacy and Dose of Rehabilitation Approaches for Severe Upper Limb Impairments and Disability During Early Acute and Subacute Stroke: A Systematic Review

 Beneficial is NOT GOOD ENOUGH! Survivors want 100% recovery! When the hell will you provide that? NEVER? So, you're OK with being a failure?

Efficacy and Dose of Rehabilitation Approaches for Severe Upper Limb Impairments and Disability During Early Acute and Subacute Stroke: A Systematic Review

Steff Doumen MSc 1 , Luca Sorba MSc 1 , Peter Feys PhD 1 , Lisa Tedesco Triccas PhD 1,2 1 Faculty of Rehabilitation Sciences, REVAL, University of Hasselt, Martelarenlaan 42, 3500, Hasselt, Belgium 2 Department for Clinical and Movement Neuroscience, Institute of Neurology, University College London, Queen Square, London, WC1N 3BG, United Kingdom

Abstract 

Objective. 

The purpose of this study was to examine the evidence regarding the efficacy of rehabilitation approaches for improving severe upper limb impairments and activity during acute and early subacute stroke, taking into consideration the dosage of therapy. 

Methods. 

Randomized controlled trials from PubMed, Web of Science, and Scopus databases were searched by 2 independent researchers. Studies were selected if they involved active rehabilitation interventions that were conducted in the acute stage (<7 days after stroke) or the early subacute stage (>7 days3 months after stroke), with the aim of improving severe upper limb motor impairments and disability. Data were extracted on the basis of the type and effect of rehabilitation interventions, and on the dosage (duration, frequency, session length, episode difficulty, and intensity). Study quality was assessed using the Physiotherapy Evidence Database Scale. Results. Twenty-three studies (1271 participants) with fair to good methodological quality were included. Only 3 studies were performed in the acute stage. Regardless of the type of intervention, upper limb rehabilitation was found to be beneficial for severe upper limb impairments and disability. Robotic therapy and functional electrical stimulation were identified as the most popular upper limb interventions; however, only a limited number of studies showed their superiority over a dose-matched control intervention for severe upper limb impairments in the subacute stage. A longer rehabilitation session length (<60 minutes) did not seem to have a larger impact on the magnitude of improved upper limb impairments. 

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