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Source: Clinical Rehabilitation
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Total 340 results found since Jan 2013.

Effect of yoga on health-related quality of life in central nervous system disorders: A systematic review
CONCLUSIONS: With low to moderate quality of the evidence, yoga seems effective to improve HRQoL in people with Parkinson's disease. For multiple sclerosis, stroke, dementia, epilepsy and brain tumour, the quality of the evidence is still insufficient to conclude of the effectiveness of yoga.PMID:34053238 | DOI:10.1177/02692155211018429
Source: Clinical Rehabilitation - May 31, 2021 Category: Rehabilitation Authors: Rita Lenoir Dit Caron Jeremy Coquart Maxime Gilliaux Source Type: research

Using a bimanual lever-driven wheelchair for arm movement practice early after stroke: A pilot, randomized, controlled, single-blind trial
CONCLUSIONS: Practising arm movement with a lever-driven wheelchair is a feasible method for increasing arm movement early after stroke. It enabled wheelchair mobility for a subset of patients and shows potential for improving arm motor recovery.PMID:34027703 | DOI:10.1177/02692155211014362
Source: Clinical Rehabilitation - May 24, 2021 Category: Rehabilitation Authors: Brendan W Smith Joan Lobo-Prat Daniel K Zondervan Christopher Lew Vicky Chan Cathy Chou Spencer Toledo David J Reinkensmeyer Susan Shaw Steven C Cramer Source Type: research

Treatments for sleep disturbances in individuals with acquired brain injury: A systematic review
CONCLUSION: Although there was heterogeneity in the study quality of the included studies, their outcomes suggest that cognitive behavioral therapy is recommended as treatment of choice for improving sleep in individuals with acquired brain injury, especially for patients with mild to severe traumatic brain injury. Future research should examine the effects of cognitive behavioral therapy in more high-quality randomized controlled designs.PMID:34013776 | DOI:10.1177/02692155211014827
Source: Clinical Rehabilitation - May 20, 2021 Category: Rehabilitation Authors: Louise Pilon Nikita Frankenmolen Dirk Bertens Source Type: research

Why allied health professionals use evidence-based clinical guidelines in stroke rehabilitation: A systematic review and meta-synthesis of qualitative studies
CONCLUSIONS: Variabilities in clinical guideline use by allied health professionals are due to their clinical reasoning, contextual factors, client characteristics and enabling health systems.PMID:33906456 | DOI:10.1177/02692155211012324
Source: Clinical Rehabilitation - April 28, 2021 Category: Rehabilitation Authors: Dayna Halls Carolyn Murray Ben Sellar Source Type: research

Testing the psychometric properties of the Chinese version of the Neurological Fatigue Index-Stroke
CONCLUSIONS: The C-NFI-Stroke is a reliable and valid tool for clinical and research use on people who have been diagnosed with stroke for a year or more, although its factor structure differs from that of the original English version.PMID:33722084 | DOI:10.1177/02692155211001684
Source: Clinical Rehabilitation - March 16, 2021 Category: Rehabilitation Authors: Lily Yw Ho Claudia Ky Lai Shamay Sm Ng Source Type: research

Rehabilitation with accurate adaptability walking tasks or steady state walking: A randomized clinical trial in adults post-stroke
CONCLUSIONS: The ACC and SS interventions produced similar changes in walking function. fNIRS suggested a potential benefit of ACC training for reducing demand on prefrontal (executive) resources during walking.PMID:33722075 | DOI:10.1177/02692155211001682
Source: Clinical Rehabilitation - March 16, 2021 Category: Rehabilitation Authors: David J Clark Dorian K Rose Katie A Butera Brooke Hoisington Louis DeMark Sudeshna A Chatterjee Kelly A Hawkins Dana M Otzel Jared W Skinner Evangelos A Christou Samuel S Wu Emily J Fox Source Type: research