DIASCHISIS AND IMPLICATIONS OF REHABILITATION IN THE POST-Stroke PATIENT
It is a fundamentally important argument for those who are facing the issue of stroke. We have already treated the topic of diaschisis in a generic way in another article, but I felt the need to expand the information also taking into consideration the new scientific...
read moreVANESSA WANTED TO TIE HER FATHER’S “GOOD” ARM
Vanessa asked me if it would be a good idea to tie her father's "good" arm. Clearly, tying the healthy arm of a hemiplegic patient is not a wise decision for a number of reasons that we will discuss together below. For now it is useful to say that the idea conceived...
read moreFacebook Groups; Strength cores
Social networks are a social structure that group people from all around the world. The use of these tools is practically infinite due to their wide functional diversity, and the tendency to use them has increased recently because of the emergence of new applications...
read moreIS IT POSSIBLE TO RECOVER FROM A LEFT OR RIGHT HEMIPLEJIA FROM HOME?
Every year 15 million people in the world suffer a Cerebrovascular Accident (CVA). Faced with this reality, and the technological possibilities offered by the time, an alternative has been created that allows both, family members and patients, to learn to perform...
read moreThe movements of awakening: The window about the future
There is a very particular phenomenon that many hemiplegia patients often report to me, which I consider important to expose. "When I wake up in my bed in the morning, I can barely move my hand a bit, but later in the day, I can't do it" Let's try to think over and...
read moreAPHASIA EXPOSES THE HEMIPLEGIC PATIENT TO IMPROPER REHABILITATION
Aphasia from 3 points of view: Patient, Family Member and Therapist. “The problem of right hemiplegia with aphasia is that it is really complex to manage from all points of view.” The patient finds himself from one day to the next without his ability to move on the...
read moreEPIDEMIOLOGY OF CVA IN COLOMBIA
The evaluation of the population health status has been based on simple estimators such as general mortality rates or by age groups, incidence rates, prevalence or lethality, these estimators present limitations to measure the health-disease phenomenon. Stroke...
read morePOST STROKE DYSPHAGIA [HERE]
Dysphagia is when difficulties occur in the swallowing process. This symptom can be present in the first days after the stroke, manifesting itself with levels of severity, ranging from the difficulty of swallowing only some types of food, to the total impossibility of...
read moreINTERPRETATION AND REHABILITATION OF THE PATIENT WITH CEREBELLAR STROKE
In the pages of this site, we almost exclusively refer to the most common strokes, and until now, we have never discussed the topic of cerebellar stroke and what is the cerebellum. This is a particularly complex issue, on one hand due to the complexity of the...
read moreWHEN A PATIENT DOES NOT COOPERATE AFTER A STROKE
When we hear this phrase said by the operators of a rehabilitation clinic or hospital: ¨the patient does not cooperate¨ our world falls apart. We have just passed the most critical stage where we did not even know if our relative would survive the stroke and now we...
read more