Neuro Simplified • Easy to Digest Neuro Rehab
In this episode, we dive into groundbreaking research exploring how stroke impacts the brain’s internal representation of the body, known as the body schema. While traditional rehabilitation for upper limb impairment often produces only modest gains, new evidence suggests that the fundamental way a person perceives their limbs is altered following a stroke. We examine an observational study involving 895 participants that utilized left/right judgment tasks to measure the accuracy and speed of limb recognition. The findings reveal that individuals with stroke are significantly slower and less accurate in identifying the laterality of hand and shoulder images compared to those without stroke. Importantly, these deficits exist regardless of whether the individual experiences chronic pain or which side of the brain was affected. Join us as we discuss how these insights into "scrambled" body maps are shaping the future of motor imagery training and providing a foundation for more effective, tailored neurorehabilitation strategies. Source: Haslam BS, Butler DS, Cocks TS, Kim AS, Carey LM. Body schema as assessed by upper limb left/right judgment tasks is altered in stroke: implications for motor imagery training. J Neurol Phys Ther. 2023;47(1):26-34. doi:10.1097/NPT.0000000000000412. Powered by: Google Notebook LM
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