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Source: Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine
Condition: Disability

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Total 89 results found since Jan 2013.

Long-term perceived disabilities up to 10 years after transient ischaemic attack
CONCLUSION: The broadly perceived disabilities were demonstrated consistently and played a significant meaningful role in everyday life and recovery among community-dwelling individuals up to 10 years after a transient ischaemic attack. These findings indicate the need for long-term multi-professional follow-up with holistic rehabilitation to improve overall recovery among survivors of transient ischaemic attack.PMID:33656562 | DOI:10.2340/16501977-2808
Source: Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine - March 3, 2021 Category: Rehabilitation Authors: Jenni Andersson Britt-Marie St ålnacke Ann S örlin Gustaf Magaard Xiaolei Hu Source Type: research

Effect of a comprehensive eRehabilitation intervention alongside conventional stroke rehabilitation on disability and health-related quality of life: A pre-post comparison.
CONCLUSION: eRehabilitation alongside conventional stroke rehabilitation had a small effect on communication and physical strength on the longer term. PMID: 33369683 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine - December 30, 2020 Category: Rehabilitation Tags: J Rehabil Med Source Type: research

Sustained efficacy of incobotulinumtoxinA in upper-limb post-stroke spasticity: A post hoc analysis.
CONCLUSION: IncobotulinumtoxinA conferred sustained improvements in muscle tone, disability, and caregiver burden in subjects with upper-limb post-stroke spasticity. PMID: 33112408 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine - October 29, 2020 Category: Rehabilitation Tags: J Rehabil Med Source Type: research

Self-directed, home-based, upper limb practice in stroke patients: A systematic review.
CONCLUSION: Existing self-administered home-based practice is not more effective than no intervention in improving upper limb activity in chronic, severely disabled stroke survivors. Structured home-based practice is no more effective than non-structured home-based practice. PMID: 32915239 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine - September 12, 2020 Category: Rehabilitation Tags: J Rehabil Med Source Type: research

Cross-diagnostic scale-banking using Rasch analysis: Developing a common reference metric for generic and health condition-specific scales in people with rheumatoid arthritis and stroke.
CONCLUSION: This study provides a transformation table to enable direct comparisons among instruments measuring physical functioning commonly used in rheumatoid arthritis (HAQ) and stroke (FIMTM motor scale), as well as in people with disability in general (WHODAS 2.0). PMID: 32909047 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine - September 12, 2020 Category: Rehabilitation Tags: J Rehabil Med Source Type: research

Self-rated health determinants in post-stroke individuals.
CONCLUSION: Emotional function was found to be a determinant of self-rated health in post-stroke individuals in the chronic phase and, therefore, must be assessed carefully in order to help provide integral healthcare and improve clinical decision-making. Future studies should investigate whether enhancing emotional function is associated with improvements in self-rated health in post-stroke individuals. PMID: 32719885 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine - July 30, 2020 Category: Rehabilitation Tags: J Rehabil Med Source Type: research

Clinical and functional differences between right and left stroke with and without contralateral spatial neglect.
CONCLUSION: In left and right stroke rehabilitants with equally mild neglect, those with left stroke had higher stroke severity, cognitive and total disability and dependence level. Neglect severity correlated with right or left stroke severity and functional ability, moderate to severe neglect correlated significantly more with functioning. Neglect severity was independently associated with functional outcome in right stroke. PMID: 32488286 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine - June 4, 2020 Category: Rehabilitation Tags: J Rehabil Med Source Type: research

Comparison of functional recovery and outcome at discharge from subacute inpatient rehabilitation in patients with right or left stroke with and without contralateral spatial neglect.
CONCLUSION: Mild neglect did not impair recovery after right or left stroke, but rehabilitants with neglect were more disabled and needed a longer rehabilitation inpatient stay than those without neglect. PMID: 32488283 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine - June 4, 2020 Category: Rehabilitation Tags: J Rehabil Med Source Type: research

The nature stroke study; NASTRU: A randomized controlled trial of nature-based post-stroke fatigue rehabilitation.
CONCLUSION: Nature-based rehabilitation is feasible and well tolerated. A larger randomized controlled trial is warranted. PMID: 32105334 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine - February 28, 2020 Category: Rehabilitation Tags: J Rehabil Med Source Type: research

Nature-based rehabilitation to reduce post-stroke fatigue is not effective: A randomized controlled trial.
CONCLUSION: Nature-based rehabilitation is feasible and well tolerated. A larger randomized controlled trial is warranted. PMID: 32030432 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine - February 8, 2020 Category: Rehabilitation Tags: J Rehabil Med Source Type: research

What is a return to work after stroke? 12-month outcomes in a feasibility trial.
Conclusion: This study illustrates the heterogeneous nature of return to work and the dramatic impact of stroke on work status, working hours and income. Longitudinal research should explore the socioeconomic legacy of stroke and include clear definitions of work and accurate measures of working hours and income from all sources. PMID: 31995223 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine - January 31, 2020 Category: Rehabilitation Tags: J Rehabil Med Source Type: research

Self-perceived impact of stroke: A longitudinal comparison between one and five years post-stroke.
CONCLUSION: The perceived impact of stroke becomes more prominent with time, even for persons with mild-to-moderate stroke. This study highlights the need for long-term support for persons with stroke. PMID: 31478056 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine - September 4, 2019 Category: Rehabilitation Tags: J Rehabil Med Source Type: research

The World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule (WHODAS 2.0) and the WHO Minimal Generic Set of Domains of Functioning and Health versus Conventional Instruments in subacute stroke.
CONCLUSION: Despite their brevity, both generic ICF-based tools seemed useful in finding disabilities for patient- and family-centred goal-setting and service-planning after subacute rehabilitation. PMID: 31402390 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine - August 14, 2019 Category: Rehabilitation Tags: J Rehabil Med Source Type: research

Test-retest reliability of the Participation domain of the Stroke Impact Scale in persons with chronic stroke.
CONCLUSION: The SIS Participation domain is reliable in persons with chronic stroke and mild to moderate disability and can be used to assess perceived participation in this population. PMID: 30132013 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine - August 24, 2018 Category: Rehabilitation Tags: J Rehabil Med Source Type: research

Test-retest reliability of the Life Satisfaction Questionnaire (LiSat-11) and association between items in individuals with chronic stroke.
CONCLUSION: LiSat-11 is considered reliable and can be recommended for assessing life satisfaction after stroke. The association between items indicates that LiSat-11 measures various aspects that can impact on an individual's life satisfaction. PMID: 30080236 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine - August 7, 2018 Category: Rehabilitation Tags: J Rehabil Med Source Type: research