Login / Signup

Post-stroke cognitive impairments and responsiveness to motor rehabilitation: A review.

Jennapher Lingo VanGilderAndrew HooymanDaniel S PetersonSydney Y Schaefer
Published in: Current physical medicine and rehabilitation reports (2020)
c)Considering that cognitive impairments affect motor relearning, post-stroke motor rehabilitation therapies may benefit from formal neuropsychological testing. For example, early work suggests that in neurotypical adults, cognitive function may be predictive of responsiveness to motor rehabilitation and cognitive training may improve mobility. This sets the stage for investigations probing these topics in people post-stroke. Moreover, the neural basis for and extent to which these cognitive impairments influence functional outcome remains largely unexplored and require additional investigation.
Keyphrases
  • mild cognitive impairment