Watch CBS News

Limb Movement Regained Years After Stroke

Regaining lost movement may be possible many years after
suffering a stroke thanks to intensive stroke rehabilitation therapy and help
from new robotic aids.

A new study shows people who had lost significant strength in arm movement
due to a stroke were able to achieve modest gains in limb movement and function
as well as an improved outlook on life after undergoing intensive therapy an
average of five years after their stroke.

Researchers say the results provide the best evidence yet that stroke
survivors can regain some lost movement long after their stroke. In the U.S.,
stroke survivors typically receive stroke rehabilitation therapy only during
the first six months after a stroke because the conventional wisdom is that
lost movement cannot be regained after that point.

"There are about 6.4 million stroke patients in the U.S. with chronic
deficits. We've shown that with the right therapy, they can see improvements in
movement, everyday function, and quality of life," says researcher Albert Lo,
assistant professor of neurology at Brown University, in a news release. "One
of the purposes of this study was to upend the conventional dogma that stroke
victims can't recover physiological function."

Using Robots to Regain Arm Movement

The study, published in The New England Journal of Medicine, involved
127 veterans who had suffered a stroke at least six months earlier that caused
moderate to severe impairment of an arm. On average, the stroke had occurred
nearly five years before enrollment in the study.

The participants were divided into three groups: one group received
intensive stroke rehabilitation therapy with the use of robotic aids, another
did similar exercises with a therapist, and the third group received only
general health care and no stroke rehabilitation therapy.

For the first two groups, stroke rehabilitation therapy consisted of 36
one-hour sessions over a period of 12 weeks, during which they performed 1,024
upper-arm movements either with a robotic aid or with a therapist.

In the robot-assisted group, the participants sat at a table with their
affected arm attached to the device and followed therapists' instructions or
computerized prompts to move a cursor on a screen, like playing a video game.
The robotic aid sensed their movements and provided help as needed.

Immediately after the therapy ended, researchers found people who received
robot-assisted therapy showed significant improvement in their quality of life
(an 8-point improvement on the Stroke Impact Scale) compared to those who
received no therapy. No other significant differences were found at 12 weeks
between the three groups.

But six months after the study began, the results showed that those who had
received either type of intensive stroke rehabilitation therapy had
improvements in upper-arm function (an average of a 3-point improvement on a
stroke recovery scale).

Both intensive stroke rehabilitation therapy groups also reported improved
progress in activities of their everyday life, such as cutting food with a fork
and knife, opening jars, and tying shoes.

"We believe that by gaining more function and better control of their
affected arms, patients were able to get out and do more, translating their
motor benefits into additional meaningful social activity and participation,"
says Lo.

Researchers say long-term intensive stroke rehabilitation therapy, with or
without robots, takes advantage of the brain's neuroplasticity -- the ability
of the brain to "rewire" itself and compensate for lost function after
damage.

By Jennifer Warner
Reviewed by Laura Martin
©2005-2010 WebMD, LLC. All rights reserved

View CBS News In
CBS News App Open
Chrome Safari Continue