
Post-Stroke Rehabilitation Fact Sheet
Table of Contents
- What is post-stroke rehabilitation?
- What disabilities can result from a stroke?
- What medical professionals specialize in post-stroke rehabilitation?
- Where can a stroke patient get rehabilitation?
- What research is being done?
- Where can I go for more information?
- Glossary
In the United States more
than 700,000 people suffer a stroke* each year, and approximately two-thirds of these individuals survive
and require rehabilitation. The goals of rehabilitation are to help
survivors become as independent as possible and to attain the best
possible quality of life. Even though rehabilitation does not "cure"
stroke in that it does not reverse brain damage, rehabilitation can
substantially help people achieve the best possible long-term
outcome.
What is post-stroke rehabilitation?
Rehabilitation helps stroke
survivors relearn skills that are lost when part of the brain is
damaged. For example, these skills can include coordinating leg
movements in order to walk or carrying out the steps involved in any
complex activity. Rehabilitation also teaches survivors new ways of
performing tasks to circumvent or compensate for any residual
disabilities. Patients may need to learn how to bathe and dress
using only one hand, or how to communicate effectively when their
ability to use language has been compromised. There is a strong
consensus among rehabilitation experts that the most important
element in any rehabilitation program is carefully directed,
well-focused, repetitive practice - the same kind of practice used
by all people when they learn a new skill, such as playing the piano
or pitching a baseball.
Rehabilitative therapy begins
in the acute-care hospital after the patient's medical condition has
been stabilized, often within 24 to 48 hours after the stroke. The
first steps involve promoting independent movement because many
patients are paralyzed or seriously weakened. Patients are prompted
to change positions frequently while lying in bed and to engage in
passive or active range-of-motion exercises to strengthen their
stroke-impaired limbs. ("Passive" range-of-motion exercises are
those in which the therapist actively helps the patient move a limb
repeatedly, whereas "active" exercises are performed by the patient
with no physical assistance from the therapist.) Patients progress
from sitting up and transferring between the bed and a chair to
standing, bearing their own weight, and walking, with or without
assistance. Rehabilitation nurses and therapists help patients
perform progressively more complex and demanding tasks, such as
bathing, dressing, and using a toilet, and they encourage patients
to begin using their stroke-impaired limbs while engaging in those
tasks. Beginning to reacquire the ability to carry out these basic
activities of daily living represents the first stage in a stroke
survivor's return to functional independence.
What disabilities can result from a stroke?
The types and degrees of
disability that follow a stroke depend upon which area of the brain
is damaged. Generally, stroke can cause five types of disabilities:
paralysis or problems controlling movement; sensory disturbances
including pain; problems using or understanding language; problems
with thinking and memory; and emotional disturbances.
Paralysis or problems controlling movement (motor control)
Paralysis is one of the most
common disabilities resulting from stroke. The paralysis is usually
on the side of the body opposite the side of the brain damaged by
stroke, and may affect the face, an arm, a leg, or the entire side
of the body. This one-sided paralysis is called hemiplegia
(one-sided weakness is called hemiparesis). Stroke patients
with hemiparesis or hemiplegia may have difficulty with everyday
activities such as walking or grasping objects. Some stroke patients
have problems with swallowing, called dysphagia, due to
damage to the part of the brain that controls the muscles for
swallowing. Damage to a lower part of the brain, the cerebellum, can
affect the body's ability to coordinate movement, a disability
called ataxia, leading to problems with body posture,
walking, and balance.
Sensory disturbances including pain
Stroke patients may lose the
ability to feel touch, pain, temperature, or position. Sensory
deficits may also hinder the ability to recognize objects that
patients are holding and can even be severe enough to cause loss of
recognition of one's own limb. Some stroke patients experience pain,
numbness or odd sensations of tingling or prickling in paralyzed or
weakened limbs, a condition known as paresthesia.
Stroke survivors frequently
have a variety of chronic pain syndromes resulting from
stroke-induced damage to the nervous system (neuropathic pain).
Patients who have a seriously weakened or paralyzed arm commonly
experience moderate to severe pain that radiates outward from the
shoulder. Most often, the pain results from a joint becoming
immobilized due to lack of movement and the tendons and ligaments
around the joint become fixed in one position. This is commonly
called a "frozen" joint; "passive" movement at the joint in a
paralyzed limb is essential to prevent painful "freezing" and to
allow easy movement if and when voluntary motor strength returns. In
some stroke patients, pathways for sensation in the brain are
damaged, causing the transmission of false signals that result in
the sensation of pain in a limb or side of the body that has the
sensory deficit. The most common of these pain syndromes is called
"thalamic pain syndrome," which can be difficult to treat even with
medications.
The loss of urinary
continence is fairly common immediately after a stroke and often
results from a combination of sensory and motor deficits. Stroke
survivors may lose the ability to sense the need to urinate or the
ability to control muscles of the bladder. Some may lack enough
mobility to reach a toilet in time. Loss of bowel control or
constipation may also occur. Permanent incontinence after a stroke
is uncommon. But even a temporary loss of bowel or bladder control
can be emotionally difficult for stroke survivors.
Problems using or understanding language (aphasia)
At least one-fourth of all
stroke survivors experience language impairments, involving the
ability to speak, write, and understand spoken and written language.
A stroke-induced injury to any of the brain's language-control
centers can severely impair verbal communication. Damage to a
language center located on the dominant side of the brain, known as
Broca's area, causes expressive aphasia. People with this
type of aphasia have difficulty conveying their thoughts through
words or writing. They lose the ability to speak the words they are
thinking and to put words together in coherent, grammatically
correct sentences. In contrast, damage to a language center located
in a rear portion of the brain, called Wernicke's area, results in
receptive aphasia. People with this condition have difficulty
understanding spoken or written language and often have incoherent
speech. Although they can form grammatically correct sentences,
their utterances are often devoid of meaning. The most severe form
of aphasia, global aphasia, is caused by extensive damage to
several areas involved in language function. People with global
aphasia lose nearly all their linguistic abilities; they can neither
understand language nor use it to convey thought. A less severe form
of aphasia, called anomic or amnesic aphasia, occurs
when there is only a minimal amount of brain damage; its effects are
often quite subtle. People with anomic aphasia may simply
selectively forget interrelated groups of words, such as the names
of people or particular kinds of objects.
Problems with thinking and memory
Stroke can cause damage to
parts of the brain responsible for memory, learning, and awareness.
Stroke survivors may have dramatically shortened attention spans or
may experience deficits in short-term memory. Individuals also may
lose their ability to make plans, comprehend meaning, learn new
tasks, or engage in other complex mental activities. Two fairly
common deficits resulting from stroke are anosognosia, an
inability to acknowledge the reality of the physical impairments
resulting from stroke, and neglect, the loss of the ability
to respond to objects or sensory stimuli located on one side of the
body, usually the stroke-impaired side. Stroke survivors who develop
apraxia lose their ability to plan the steps involved in a complex
task and to carry the steps out in the proper sequence. Stroke
survivors with apraxia may also have problems following a set of
instructions. Apraxia appears to be caused by a disruption of the
subtle connections that exist between thought and action.
Emotional disturbances Many people who survive a
stroke feel fear, anxiety, frustration, anger, sadness, and a sense
of grief for their physical and mental losses. These feelings are a
natural response to the psychological trauma of stroke. Some
emotional disturbances and personality changes are caused by the
physical effects of brain damage. Clinical depression, which is a
sense of hopelessness that disrupts an individual's ability to
function, appears to be the emotional disorder most commonly
experienced by stroke survivors. Signs of clinical depression
include sleep disturbances, a radical change in eating patterns that
may lead to sudden weight loss or gain, lethargy, social withdrawal,
irritability, fatigue, self-loathing, and suicidal thoughts.
Post-stroke depression can be treated with antidepressant
medications and psychological counseling.
What medical professionals specialize in post-stroke rehabilitation?
Post-stroke rehabilitation
involves physicians; rehabilitation nurses; physical, occupational,
recreational, speech-language, and vocational therapists; and mental
health professionals.
Physicians
Physicians have the primary
responsibility for managing and coordinating the long-term care of
stroke survivors, including recommending which rehabilitation
programs will best address individual needs. Physicians are also
responsible for caring for the stroke survivor's general health and
providing guidance aimed at preventing a second stroke, such as
controlling high blood pressure or diabetes and eliminating risk
factors such as cigarette smoking, excessive weight, a
high-cholesterol diet, and high alcohol consumption.
Neurologists usually lead
acute-care stroke teams and direct patient care during
hospitalization. They sometimes remain in charge of long-term
rehabilitation. However, physicians trained in other specialties
often assume responsibility after the acute stage has passed,
including physiatrists, who specialize in physical medicine
and rehabilitation. Rehabilitation nurses
Nurses specializing in
rehabilitation help survivors relearn how to carry out the basic
activities of daily living. They also educate survivors about
routine health care, such as how to follow a medication schedule,
how to care for the skin, how to manage transfers between a bed and
a wheelchair, and special needs for people with diabetes.
Rehabilitation nurses also work with survivors to reduce risk
factors that may lead to a second stroke, and provide training for
caregivers.
Nurses are closely involved
in helping stroke survivors manage personal care issues, such as
bathing and controlling incontinence. Most stroke survivors regain
their ability to maintain continence, often with the help of
strategies learned during rehabilitation. These strategies include
strengthening pelvic muscles through special exercises and following
a timed voiding schedule. If problems with incontinence continue,
nurses can help caregivers learn to insert and manage catheters and
to take special hygienic measures to prevent other
incontinence-related health problems from developing.
Physical therapists
Physical therapists
specialize in treating disabilities related to motor and sensory
impairments. They are trained in all aspects of anatomy and
physiology related to normal function, with an emphasis on movement.
They assess the stroke survivor's strength, endurance, range of
motion, gait abnormalities, and sensory deficits to design
individualized rehabilitation programs aimed at regaining control
over motor functions.
Physical therapists help
survivors regain the use of stroke-impaired limbs, teach
compensatory strategies to reduce the effect of remaining deficits,
and establish ongoing exercise programs to help people retain their
newly learned skills. Disabled people tend to avoid using impaired
limbs, a behavior called learned non-use. However, the
repetitive use of impaired limbs encourages brain
plasticity** and helps reduce disabilities.
Strategies used by physical
therapists to encourage the use of impaired limbs include selective
sensory stimulation such as tapping or stroking, active and passive
range-of-motion exercises, and temporary restraint of healthy limbs
while practicing motor tasks. Some physical therapists may use a new
technology, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation
(TENS), that encourages brain reorganization and recovery of
function. TENS involves using a small probe that generates an
electrical current to stimulate nerve activity in stroke-impaired
limbs.
In general, physical therapy
emphasizes practicing isolated movements, repeatedly changing from
one kind of movement to another, and rehearsing complex movements
that require a great deal of coordination and balance, such as
walking up or down stairs or moving safely between obstacles. People
too weak to bear their own weight can still practice repetitive
movements during hydrotherapy (in which water provides sensory
stimulation as well as weight support) or while being partially
supported by a harness. A recent trend in physical therapy
emphasizes the effectiveness of engaging in goal-directed
activities, such as playing games, to promote coordination. Physical
therapists frequently employ selective sensory stimulation to
encourage use of impaired limbs and to help survivors with neglect
regain awareness of stimuli on the neglected side of the body.
Occupational and
recreational therapists
Like physical therapists,
occupational therapists are concerned with improving motor
abilities. They help survivors relearn motor skills needed for
performing self-directed activities-occupations-such as
housecleaning, gardening, and practicing arts and crafts. Therapists
can teach some survivors how to adapt to driving and provide on-road
training. They often teach people to divide a complex activity into
its component parts, practice each part, and then perform the whole
sequence of actions. This strategy can improve coordination and may
help people with apraxia relearn how to carry out planned actions.
Occupational therapists also
teach people how to develop compensatory strategies and how to
change elements of their environment that limit goal-directed
activities. For example, people with the use of only one hand can
substitute Velcro closures for buttons on clothing. Occupational
therapists also help stroke survivors learn how to use assistive
devices, such as canes, walkers, or wheelchairs. Finally, many
occupational therapists teach people how to make changes in their
homes to increase safety, remove barriers, and facilitate physical
functioning, such as installing grab bars in bathrooms.
Recreational therapists help
people with a variety of disabilities to develop and use their
leisure time to enhance their health, independence, and quality of
life. Speech-language pathologists
Speech-language pathologists
help stroke survivors with aphasia relearn how to use language or
develop alternative means of communication. They also help people
improve their ability to swallow.
Many specialized therapeutic
techniques have been developed to assist people with aphasia. Some
forms of short-term therapy can improve comprehension rapidly.
Intensive exercises such as repeating the therapist's words,
practicing following directions, and doing reading or writing
exercises form the cornerstone of language rehabilitation.
Conversational coaching and rehearsal, as well the development of
prompts or cues to help people remember specific words, are
sometimes beneficial. Speech-language pathologists also help stroke
survivors develop strategies for circumventing language
disabilities. These strategies can include the use of symbol boards
or sign language. Recent advances in computer technology have
spurred the development of new types of equipment to enhance
communication.
Speech-language pathologists
use noninvasive imaging techniques to study swallowing patterns of
stroke survivors and identify the exact source of their impairment.
Difficulties with swallowing have many possible causes, including a
delayed swallowing reflex, an inability to manipulate food with the
tongue, or an inability to detect food remaining lodged in the
cheeks after swallowing. When the cause has been pinpointed,
speech-language pathologists work with the individual to devise
strategies to overcome or minimize the deficit. Sometimes, simply
changing body position and improving posture during eating can bring
about improvement. The texture of foods can be modified to make
swallowing easier; for example, thin liquids, which often cause
choking, can be thickened. Changing eating habits by taking small
bites and chewing slowly can also help alleviate dysphagia.
Vocational therapists
Approximately one-fourth of
all strokes occur in people between the ages of 45 and 65. For most
people in this age group, returning to work is a major concern.
Vocational therapists perform many of the same functions that
ordinary career counselors do. They can help people with residual
disabilities identify vocational strengths and develop resumés that
highlight those strengths. They also can help identify potential
employers, assist in specific job searches, and provide referrals to
stroke vocational rehabilitation agencies.
Most important, vocational
therapists educate disabled individuals about their rights and
protections as defined by the Americans with Disabilities Act of
1990. This law requires employers to make "reasonable
accommodations" for disabled employees. Vocational therapists
frequently act as mediators between employers and employees to
negotiate the provision of reasonable accommodations in the
workplace.
Where can a stroke patient get rehabilitation?
Rehabilitation should begin
as soon as a stroke patient is stable, often within 24 to 48 hours
after a stroke. This first stage of rehabilitation usually occurs
within an acute-care hospital. At the time of discharge from the
hospital, the stroke patient and family coordinate with hospital
social workers to locate a suitable living arrangement. Many stroke
survivors return home, but some move into some type of medical
facility.
Inpatient rehabilitation
units
Inpatient facilities may be
freestanding or part of larger hospital complexes. Patients stay in
the facility, usually for 2 to 3 weeks, and engage in a coordinated,
intensive program of rehabilitation. Such programs often involve at
least 3 hours of active therapy a day, 5 or 6 days a week. Inpatient
facilities offer a comprehensive range of medical services,
including full-time physician supervision and access to the full
range of therapists specializing in post-stroke rehabilitation.
Outpatient units
Outpatient facilities are
often part of a larger hospital complex and provide access to
physicians and the full range of therapists specializing in stroke
rehabilitation. Patients typically spend several hours, often 3 days
each week, at the facility taking part in coordinated therapy
sessions and return home at night. Comprehensive outpatient
facilities frequently offer treatment programs as intense as those
of inpatient facilities, but they also can offer less demanding
regimens, depending on the patient's physical capacity.
Nursing facilities
Rehabilitative services
available at nursing facilities are more variable than are those at
inpatient and outpatient units. Skilled nursing facilities usually
place a greater emphasis on rehabilitation, whereas traditional
nursing homes emphasize residential care. In addition, fewer hours
of therapy are offered compared to outpatient and inpatient
rehabilitation units.
Home-based rehabilitation programs
Home rehabilitation allows
for great flexibility so that patients can tailor their program of
rehabilitation and follow individual schedules. Stroke survivors may
participate in an intensive level of therapy several hours per week
or follow a less demanding regimen. These arrangements are often
best suited for people who lack transportation or require treatment
by only one type of rehabilitation therapist. Patients dependent on
Medicare coverage for their rehabilitation must meet Medicare's
"homebound" requirements to qualify for such services; at this time
lack of transportation is not a valid reason for home therapy. The
major disadvantage of home-based rehabilitation programs is the lack
of specialized equipment. However, undergoing treatment at home
gives people the advantage of practicing skills and developing
compensatory strategies in the context of their own living
environment.
What research is being done?
The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), a component of the
Federal Government's National Institutes of Health (NIH), has
primary responsibility for sponsoring research on disorders of the
brain and nervous system, including the acute phase of stroke and
the restoration of function after stroke. The NINDS also supports
research on ways to enhance repair and regeneration of the central
nervous system. Scientists funded by the NINDS are studying how the
brain responds to experience or adapts to injury by reorganizing its
functions (plasticity) by using noninvasive imaging technologies to
map patterns of biological activity inside the brain. Other
NINDS-sponsored scientists are looking at brain reorganization after
stroke and determining whether specific rehabilitative techniques,
such as constraint-induced movement therapy and transcranial
magnetic stimulation, can stimulate brain plasticity, thereby
improving motor function and decreasing disability. Other scientists
are experimenting with implantation of neural stem cells, to see if
these cells may be able to replace the cells that died as a result
of a stroke.
*A stroke or "brain attack" occurs when brain cells die because of inadequate
blood flow. When blood flow is interrupted, brain cells are robbed
of vital supplies of oxygen and nutrients. About 80 percent of
strokes are caused by the blockage of an artery in the neck or
brain; the remainder are caused by a burst blood vessel in the brain
that causes bleeding into or around the brain.
**Functions compromised when a specific region of the
brain is damaged by stroke can sometimes be taken over by other
parts of the brain. This ability to adapt and change is known as
plasticity.
Where can I get more information?
For more information on neurological disorders or research
programs funded by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders
and Stroke, contact the Institute's Brain Resources and Information
Network (BRAIN) at:
BRAIN P.O. Box 5801 Bethesda, MD 20824 (800)
352-9424 http://www.ninds.nih.gov/
Information also is available from the following
organizations:
American Speech Language Hearing Association
(ASHA) 10801 Rockville Pike Rockville, MD
20852-3279 actioncenter@asha.org http://www.asha.org/ Tel:
301-897-5700 800-638-8255 Fax: 301-571-0457
American Stroke Association: A Division of
American Heart Association 7272 Greenville
Avenue Dallas, TX 75231-4596 strokeassociation@heart.org http://www.strokeassociation.org/ Tel:
1-888-4STROKE (478-7653) Fax: 214-706-5231
Easter Seals 230 West Monroe
Street Suite 1800 Chicago, IL 60606-4802 info@easter-seals.org http://www.easter-seals.org/ Tel:
312-726-6200 800-221-6827 Fax: 312-726-1494
<National Aphasia Association
29 John Street Suite 1103 New York, NY 10038 naa@aphasia.org http://www.aphasia.org/ Tel:
212-267-2814 800-922-4NAA (4622) Fax:
212-267-2812
National Rehabilitation Information Center
(NARIC) 4200 Forbes Boulevard Suite 202 Lanham,
MD 20706-4829
naricinfo@heitechservices.com http://www.naric.com/ Tel:
301-459-5900/301-459-5984 (TTY) 800-346-2742 Fax:
301-562-2401
National Stroke Association 9707 East
Easter Lane Englewood, CO 80112-3747 info@stroke.org http://www.stroke.org/ Tel:
303-649-9299 800-STROKES (787-6537) Fax:
303-649-1328
Stroke Clubs International 805 12th
Street Galveston, TX 77550 strokeclubs@earthlink.net Tel:
409-762-1022
Outpatient Facilities
Outpatient facilities are
often part of a larger hospital complex and provide access to
physicians and the full range of therapists specializing in stroke
rehabilitation. Patients typically spend several hours, often 3 days
each week, at the facility taking part in coordinated therapy
sessions and return home at night. Comprehensive outpatient
facilities frequently offer treatment programs as intense as those
of inpatient facilities, but they also can offer less demanding
regimens, depending on the patient's physical capacity.
Nursing facilities
Rehabilitative services available at nursing facilities are more
variable than are those at inpatient and outpatient units. Skilled
nursing facilities usually place a greater emphasis on
rehabilitation, whereas traditional nursing homes emphasize
residential care. In addition, fewer hours of therapy are offered
compared to outpatient and inpatient rehabilitation units.
Home-based rehabilitation programs
Home rehabilitation allows for great flexibility so that patients
can tailor their program of rehabilitation and follow individual
schedules. Stroke survivors may participate in an intensive level of
therapy several hours per week or follow a less demanding regimen.
These arrangements are often best suited for people who lack
transportation or require treatment by only one type of
rehabilitation therapist. Patients dependent on Medicare coverage
for their rehabilitation must meet Medicare's "homebound"
requirements to qualify for such services; at this time lack of
transportation is not a valid reason for home therapy. The major
disadvantage of home-based rehabilitation programs is the lack of
specialized equipment. However, undergoing treatment at home gives
people the advantage of practicing skills and developing
compensatory strategies in the context of their own living
environment.
"Post-Stroke Rehabilitation Fact Sheet", NINDS. July 2004.
Prepared by: Office of Communications and Public
Liaison National Institute of Neurological Disorders and
Stroke National Institutes of Health Bethesda, MD 20892
NINDS health-related material is provided for information
purposes only and does not necessarily represent endorsement by or
an official position of the National Institute of Neurological
Disorders and Stroke or any other Federal agency. Advice on the
treatment or care of an individual patient should be obtained
through consultation with a physician who has examined that patient
or is familiar with that patient's medical history.
Last updated December 13, 2004 |