Neurorehabilitation and neural repair
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Neurorehabil Neural Repair · Jan 2000
Reassessment of the incidence of complex regional pain syndrome type 1 following stroke.
Previous literature has suggested that reflex sympathetic dystrophy, also known as complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) type 1, is a relatively common finding after a stroke. However, much of this data was obtained before patients routinely received early intensive inpatient rehabilitation. The purpose of this study is to reevaluate the incidence of CRPS type 1 following an acute first stroke. ⋯ Thus our study revealed a 1.56 percent incidence of CRPS type 1 following a first stroke. This incidence is much lower than the historically accepted 12.5 percent. We speculate that this low figure is related to early comprehensive rehabilitation that included proper upper extremity positioning and early mobilization with sensory stimulation.
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Neurorehabil Neural Repair · Jan 2000
Recovery rates after stroke and their impact on outcome prediction.
Current assessments do not provide reliable factors predictive of outcome from stroke for stroke survivors of intermediate age and severity of deficit. We sought to investigate whether early rate of functional improvement can facilitate prediction of functional outcome, length of stay, and disposition beyond that afforded by age and initial severity of deficit. Prospective study of consecutive admissions to acute rehabilitation (N = 244) with diagnosis of ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke. ⋯ ROFC has an independent influence on outcome but was sufficiently powerful in our sample to identify reliably only a very small subset of patients with otherwise indeterminate prognosis. LOS seems inordinately prolonged in patients with poor outcomes. Both of these results can guide efficient rehabilitation management.