Jan 22, 2019

Wanna write a book?

From the publisher of my book...You can email her directly (contact info, below) if you're interested. Best, -pete

"I’ve been thinking about two possible new books on stroke for our list and I wondered if you might know of anyone who might be interested in writing them:
 
A Caregiver’s Guide to Stroke: a handbook to help the caregiver, addressing all of the issues and best practices they should know about: creating and managing a health care team, dealing with the various physical, emotional and cognitive issues, etc. The right author would most likely be a social worker, therapist, or professional caregiver.
 
Myths vs. Facts on stroke: a book aimed at dispelling the myths/misinformation about the causes, treatment, physical and cognitive impact of stroke." 

Julia Pastore
Executive Editor, Demos Health Publishing
jpastore@demoshealth.com

Jan 21, 2019

Don't stop. Don't stagnate. Don't let a lull convince you recovery has ended.

What about "Long-Term Rehab Management of Stroke"? What do we know about stroke recovery as we get into months and years and decades? 
What does this post have
to do with this girl?
Nothing!

The first thing we know is that its nonsense to believe that recovery has some sort of expiration date. I like the idea of someone coasting for a month or longer and then recommitting themselves to recovery. Its never too late.
 
What does tend to happen is "adaptation." The word refers to the notion that if you do the same techniques you get the same results. Survivors and therapists can both cause adaptation. Therapists can get used to what they use and go automatic and unimaginative with treatments. Survivors can get lazy and not push against their present abilities. 

Bottom line: There is good  evidence in the research that so-called "chronic" survivors can continue to make progress.

Don't stop. Don't stagnate. Don't let a lull convince you recovery has ended.

The most important gizmo for recovery is you

I do stroke recovery talks to PTs and OTs (and a mix of other clinicians, survivors and caregivers) all over the US. Today I'm in Cheyenne, WY. 
Between Casper and Cheyenne
I've had many conversations with therapists over the years. One of the things that's remarkable is how little consistency  there is in the tools therapists have. Some therapists have every gizmo known to man, others have little other than their creativity and a few standard tools. Imagine the difference between working in a leading-edge rehab hospital vs. an on-the-road home care therapist.
That's me. The king of PowerPoint.

Do "stroke recovery machines" make a difference? Within reason, no. There are a few tools that may be essential. For instance, electrical stimulation, parallel bars and a mirror may be essential at some points in some survivor's recovery. Really, much more important is the training of the therapist. This is not just true in stroke rehab but in many areas of medicine; outcomes are directly tied to the training of the clinician. For most survivors, the knowledge of the therapist is the most important gizmo. 

But remember, they'll "discharge" you at some point and then the most important gizmo for recovery is you (and caregivers!).

Jan 14, 2019

SEMINAR STUFF


$39. Shipping included... 
Because recovery should not cost an arm and a leg.
. . .
Note: Info in links may be subject to copyright laws. 

TREATING
Electrical Stimulation (E-Stim)
Lower extremity Constraint Induced Therapy
Sensation Recovery
Repetitive and demanding practice decreases spasticity and “pathological” synergies
VIDEO
RESEARCHING
Researching Stroke Recovery
Clinical Guidelines from around the World
Information About Other Forms of Brain Injury
Find Stroke-Recovery Research in Your Area
Two Free Stroke-Specific Magazines
MEASURING
Measuring Recovery
Cognitive (mental) Tests
READING
Articles by Pete
    See list of selected articles on the lower left column of this blog
      REFERENCING
      RESOURCES
      Amazing CIT dissertation by STACY L. FRITZ that includes:
      Does walking early (sometimes within 24 hours) help or hurt?

      ·  An article where they interviewed therapists, docs and nurses: Conclusion: Our study shows that most clinicians had concerns in relation to early mobilisation of stroke patients and more clinicians had concerns for haemorrhagic than for ischaemic stroke.
      · An article looking at very early mobilization and depression: Conclusion: Very early mobilization may reduce depressive symptoms in stroke patients at 7 days post-stroke.
      · Early mobilization out of bed after stroke may be all good: Conclusion: It seems to reduce severe complications but not cerebral blood flow:
      · Early mobilization out of bed after stroke, maybe: Conclusions: Insufficient data are available to prove the beneficial effects of early mobilisation after stroke.
      · A Very Early Rehabilitation Trial for Stroke (AVERT): Conclusions: Very early mobilzation of patients within 24 hours of acute stroke appears safe and feasible.  
      · The LEAPS trial (the largest study ever done on post-stroke rehab): "patients who received early locomotor training experienced more multiple falls."

      A GREAT OT BLOG!

      Jan 8, 2019

      Why Dynasplint is half dead (and all dead for survivors)

      Do you have muscles tightened by spasticity? 

      Sarcomeres are the small units in muscle that contract when your muscles contract. (Great image here. Look at the bottom right corner.)  Sarcomeres will increase in numbers when muscle is put through a prolonged stretch. Increasing sarcomeres is how muscles are lengthened. Lengthening of muscle and increasing sarcomeres increases flexibility. Which is a good thing because we can talk about neuroplasticity until the cows come home but if your arm (or whatever) "won't go that way," all bets are off.
       
      OK. So how might you increase the number of sarcomeres? One way that many clinicians think works is called "dynamic splinting." The idea is that you'd wear something that would hold you in a position that would stretch you. If you could wear it at that posture for 2-3 hours, the clinician would "dial in" a more "aggressive" range of motion. Over time you'd gain sarcomeres which would allow you to have more range of motion. 

      Sounds groovy, right?

      It works for, say, marital artists who want flexibility so they can KICK ASS.


      Stretching ROCKS! Sometimes!
      You stretch, you get a longer muscle, everybody's happy!

      But yeah. That whole science thing gets in the way. Don't you just hate science?

      It turns out that the way to elongate (add sarcomeres)  "normal" muscle is nothing like the way you'd do it in spastic muscle. To stretch spastic muscles so they gain length, the stretch must be held at least 48 hours. And dynamic splints are not kept on for anywhere near that long; a few hours, max. 

      And here's another little interesting tidbit. The 600 pound gorilla of dynamic splints is a company call DynaSplint (get it?) and they've had a little bit of trouble lately. The kind of trouble where they may have defrauded the Federal Govmint. And they laid off 500 workers in one day. Which makes sense since it was a DynaSplint salesperson that was the whistle-blower that brought the whole company down. Which then triggered their bank to stop their operating budget.

      And while I have no idea of any of those problems are warranted, one thing I do know is that they are fraudulent in another way. Again and again they claim that their splinting systems help folks with spasticity. They also claim they increase muscle length. Don't buy it!