Health Research Digest with Leo and Eva

The Gentle Electrical Spark That Helped Stroke Survivors Win Back Their Everyday Lives

20 min · 5 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio The Gentle Electrical Spark That Helped Stroke Survivors Win Back Their Everyday Lives

Descripción

Danish researchers carried out a rigorous systematic review and meta-analysis, screening over 6,000 studies before carefully analysing data from 20 high-quality randomized controlled trials involving nearly 1,000 stroke survivors. By combining results using strict scientific methods, they discovered that neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES - a niche of EMS) delivers a meaningful improvement in activities of daily living (ADL), particularly when applied in the subacute stage and to the upper extremity. This gold-standard approach provides credible, evidence-based support that targeted electrical muscle stimulation can help stroke survivors regain independence in everyday tasks. The findings offer real discovery— read the full article to understand what this means for the future of better wellbeings . https://oriems.fit/blogs/research-digest/could-gentle-electrical-pulses-help-stroke-survivors-get-their-independence-back

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episode Early EMS Supports Better Shoulder Alignment in Stroke Recovery. Canadian Research reveals. artwork

Early EMS Supports Better Shoulder Alignment in Stroke Recovery. Canadian Research reveals.

Researchers from McGill University in Canada reviewed 10 clinical trials in a meta-analysis published in BioMed Research International. They examined how Early EMS affects stroke survivors. Scientists measured shoulder subluxation using X-rays before and after treatment. The results showed that adding Early EMS to standard therapy reduced shoulder displacement by an average of 4.9 mm when started within six months after stroke. This evidence suggests Early EMS may help protect shoulder alignment and support better positioning during early recovery. The study is legitimate because it combined high-quality trials using strict scientific standards. Read the full post to see the detailed findings and what this means for stroke rehabilitation. https://oriems.fit/blogs/research-digest/early-ems-shoulder-subluxation-stroke

14 de jul de 202623 min
episode Which Type of EMS/FES Works Best for Stroke Arms? What the Latest Systematic Review Shows artwork

Which Type of EMS/FES Works Best for Stroke Arms? What the Latest Systematic Review Shows

Scientists from Stanford University led a major systematic review and meta-analysis on FES (functional electrical stimulation - a niche of  EMS  ) for upper limb recovery after stroke. They searched four databases, screened 923 papers, and analysed 25 high-quality studies involving real stroke patients. Using standard clinical tests like the Fugl-Meyer Assessment and Action Research Arm Test, they measured arm function before and after treatment. All three types of EMS / FES delivered significant improvements. EMG-controlled FES showed the largest average gains. These findings suggest EMS technology can meaningfully support muscle activation and functional movement when patients actively try to move. The study is highly legit — published in Frontiers in Neurology following strict international standards. Read the full post to see the detailed comparison and what it means for recovery. https://oriems.fit/blogs/research-digest/emg-fes-stroke-arm-recovery-2023-review

14 de jul de 202617 min
episode Can Cyclical EMS Build Post-Stroke Strength? artwork

Can Cyclical EMS Build Post-Stroke Strength?

Australian researchers from The University of Sydney conducted a high-quality systematic review and meta-analysis of 16 clinical trials involving 638 stroke survivors. They carefully measured muscle strength through force and torque tests, and activity levels using real-world performance tasks. The results were clear. Cyclical EMS increased strength with a moderate effect size of 0.47, and these gains were maintained at 0.33 after treatment ended. Activity also improved significantly (0.30), with lasting benefits of 0.38. This credible evidence, published in the respected Journal of Physiotherapy, suggests cyclical EMS may help stroke survivors rebuild strength and improve daily function. The strong scientific methods and consistent findings make this research trustworthy. Read the full post for more details and practical insights. https://oriems.fit/blogs/research-digest/cyclical-ems-builds-real-strength-after-stroke [https://oriems.fit/blogs/research-digest/cyclical-ems-builds-real-strength-after-stroke]

14 de jul de 202622 min
episode Does EMS Reduce Shoulder Subluxation After Stroke? What a Meta-Analysis Shows artwork

Does EMS Reduce Shoulder Subluxation After Stroke? What a Meta-Analysis Shows

A 2017 meta-analysis in the prestigious journal Clinical Rehabilitation examined 11 randomised trials involving 432 people. Scientists measured shoulder subluxation precisely with X-rays in millimetres. They found EMS produced a large reduction (SMD –1.11) in acute and subacute stroke patients. Both short and long daily sessions worked. Led by researchers from the top-ranked University of Southern California and Korean universities, the evidence is solid and peer-reviewed. These results suggest EMS may help reduce joint separation early after stroke. Want the full story, exact numbers, and practical takeaways? Read the complete article below. https://oriems.fit/blogs/research-digest/ems-helps-reduce-shoulder-subluxation-stroke [https://oriems.fit/blogs/research-digest/ems-helps-reduce-shoulder-subluxation-stroke]

Ayer22 min
episode Does EMS Improve Activity After Stroke? An Australian Study Reveals the Answer artwork

Does EMS Improve Activity After Stroke? An Australian Study Reveals the Answer

Australian scientists from La Trobe University conducted a rigorous systematic review and meta-analysis on EMS after stroke. They searched six major databases and selected 18 high-quality trials involving 485 people. They measured real activity performance using standard tests. Results showed a moderate effect: EMS improved activity by SMD 0.40 versus nothing and 0.56 versus training alone. Upper-limb activity improved largely (SMD 0.69). Walking speed rose 0.08 m/s. These solid numbers suggest EMS may help stroke survivors regain daily abilities better than exercise alone. Published in the prestigious Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, this trustworthy Australian research is worth reading in full. https://oriems.fit/blogs/research-digest/ems-improves-activity-after-stroke-australian-study

Ayer24 min