Health Research Digest with Leo and Eva
In a rigorous study, researchers from Case Western Reserve University investigated whether EMS technology could support motor recovery in stroke survivors with weak arms. Using a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled design — the gold standard for medical evidence — they gave one group real targeted stimulation to repeatedly activate wrist and finger muscles, while the control group received only skin sensation without movement. Scientists measured outcomes with the Fugl-Meyer assessment and Functional Independence Measure at multiple time points. The EMS group achieved significantly greater improvements in arm movement control, with benefits still clear three months later. Published in the respected journal Stroke by the American Heart Association, these findings provide credible evidence that EMS may help enhance upper extremity motor recovery. Read the full post to understand what this means for real-world rehabilitation. https://oriems.fit/blogs/research-digest/does-ems-speed-motor-recovery-in-stroke
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