I am now retired from my responsibilities as Director of Stroke Rehabilitation at Burke Rehabilitation Hospital. This has given me an opportunity to pursue the development of: 1) Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation as a potential Rehabilitative Treatment for Lateropulsion, a disabling alteration of the patient's postural vertical perception, following stroke. 2) Robotic Treatment strategies for the enhancement of upper limb motor recovery following stroke.
We sought to assess the type, frequency, and clinical predictors of neuromedical complications oc... more We sought to assess the type, frequency, and clinical predictors of neuromedical complications occurring during inpatient rehabilitation after stroke. One hundred consecutive patient records were reviewed. All medical and neurological complications requiring a physician's order for further evaluation or treatment were recorded. Complications were urinary tract infection (44 cases), depression (33), musculoskeletal pain (31), urinary retention (25), falls (25), fungal dermatitis (24), hypotension (19), diabetes mellitus (16), hypertension (15), and other neuromedical problem (194). The mean +/- SD numbers of medical and neurological complications per patient were 3.6 +/- 2 and 0.6 +/- 0.8, respectively. Complications were independently related to both the severity of functional disability as judged by Barthel score (r = -.42, P < .001) and length of rehabilitation hospital stay (r = .54, P < .001). Cardiac complications were predicted by New York Heart Association class 3 o...
ABSTRACT Based on the number of patients involved, stroke dominates the field of neurologic rehab... more ABSTRACT Based on the number of patients involved, stroke dominates the field of neurologic rehabilitation. The prevalence of stroke in the United States population is 1.4 million. This represents a prevalence for stroke of 612 per 100,000 population, compared with 157 for Parkinson&#39;s disease, 50 for spinal-cord injury, 42 for multiple sclerosis, and 16 for head-injured survivors with neurologic sequelae. This article provides an overview of stroke rehabilitation and covers patient management for the acute phase, subacute phase, and chronic phase poststroke. Medical and nursing care are discussed throughout and physical, occupational, and speech therapy for patients in these three phases are explored.
Journal of stroke and cerebrovascular diseases : the official journal of National Stroke Association, 2017
Comparing cohorts with similar functional and motor status at admission to inpatient rehabilitati... more Comparing cohorts with similar functional and motor status at admission to inpatient rehabilitation may delineate demographics or impairments associated with recovery from lateropulsion, also known as "pusher syndrome," after stroke based on lesion side. The aim of this case-control study was to determine how demographics and severity of stroke impairments at admission to inpatient rehabilitation distinguish patients who recover from lateropulsion from those who do not. Patients with admission motor Functional Independence Measure (FIM) scores less than 31 and contralesional lower extremity Fugl-Meyer motor scores less than 19 out of 34 were included. Burke Lateropulsion Scales score of 2 or higher at the time of discharge from inpatient rehabilitation indicated persistent lateropulsion; a score of 0 or 1 indicated resolved lateropulsion. Logistic regression tests included age, gender, admission Motricity Index score, limb placement error, and cognitive FIM score. χ(2) ana...
Of 225 patients referred to a dementia clinic, depression occurred in 31 (70%) of 44 patients not... more Of 225 patients referred to a dementia clinic, depression occurred in 31 (70%) of 44 patients not thought to be demented, six (24%) of 25 with cognitive impairment not severe enough to warrant the label dementia, and 24 (15%) of 156 with various forms of dementia, including 19 (19%) of 99 with Alzheimer-type dementia. Follow-up over three years has shown that 16 (57%) of 28 of the depressed, nondemented patients went on to develop frank dementia. Thirteen of these 16 had some sign, often subtle, of organic neurologic disease. Depressed elderly patients with any of the following are at high risk to develop dementia: evidence of cerebrovascular, extrapyramidal, or spinocerebellar disease; a modified Hachinski ischemic score of 4 or greater; a Mental Status Questionnaire score under 8; a dementia behavior score of 7 or higher; or confusion on low doses of tricyclic antidepressants. Dementing illnesses can present as depression with relatively little cognitive impairment.
Pathologic tilt of subjective visual vertical (SVV) frequently has adverse functional consequence... more Pathologic tilt of subjective visual vertical (SVV) frequently has adverse functional consequences for patients with stroke and vestibular disorders. Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) of the supramarginal gyrus can produce a transitory tilt on SVV in healthy subjects. However, the effect of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) on SVV has never been systematically studied. We investigated whether bilateral tDCS over the temporal-parietal region could result in both online and offline SVV misperception in healthy subjects. In a randomized, sham-controlled, single-blind crossover pilot study, thirteen healthy subjects performed tests of SVV before, during and after the tDCS applied over the temporal-parietal region in three conditions used on different days: right anode/left cathode; right cathode/left anode; and sham. Subjects were blind to the tDCS conditions. Montage-specific current flow patterns were investigated using computational models. SVV was sign...
The dexamethasone suppression test (DST) result was found to be abnormal in 49% of patients who w... more The dexamethasone suppression test (DST) result was found to be abnormal in 49% of patients who were an average of seven weeks post stroke. The DST response correlated with depressive symptoms as measured by both the Zung and modified Hamilton Depression scales. The specificity of the DST for clinically diagnosed depression reached 87% for the 8 AM cortisol determination, with a corresponding sensitivity of 47%. It was not related to the patient&amp;amp;#39;s final level of self-care function as measured by the Barthel score, need for nursing home placement following discharge, or duration of rehabilitation needed to achieve maximum benefit. Abnormal responses were more prevalent in cerebral hemisphere than in brain-stem or cerebellar strokes. The more extensive the stroke the more likely the possibility of an abnormal DST response. The DST response is stable, with test-retest replicability being 84% at two weeks and 74% at seven weeks.
We sought to assess the type, frequency, and clinical predictors of neuromedical complications oc... more We sought to assess the type, frequency, and clinical predictors of neuromedical complications occurring during inpatient rehabilitation after stroke. One hundred consecutive patient records were reviewed. All medical and neurological complications requiring a physician's order for further evaluation or treatment were recorded. Complications were urinary tract infection (44 cases), depression (33), musculoskeletal pain (31), urinary retention (25), falls (25), fungal dermatitis (24), hypotension (19), diabetes mellitus (16), hypertension (15), and other neuromedical problem (194). The mean +/- SD numbers of medical and neurological complications per patient were 3.6 +/- 2 and 0.6 +/- 0.8, respectively. Complications were independently related to both the severity of functional disability as judged by Barthel score (r = -.42, P < .001) and length of rehabilitation hospital stay (r = .54, P < .001). Cardiac complications were predicted by New York Heart Association class 3 o...
ABSTRACT Based on the number of patients involved, stroke dominates the field of neurologic rehab... more ABSTRACT Based on the number of patients involved, stroke dominates the field of neurologic rehabilitation. The prevalence of stroke in the United States population is 1.4 million. This represents a prevalence for stroke of 612 per 100,000 population, compared with 157 for Parkinson&#39;s disease, 50 for spinal-cord injury, 42 for multiple sclerosis, and 16 for head-injured survivors with neurologic sequelae. This article provides an overview of stroke rehabilitation and covers patient management for the acute phase, subacute phase, and chronic phase poststroke. Medical and nursing care are discussed throughout and physical, occupational, and speech therapy for patients in these three phases are explored.
Journal of stroke and cerebrovascular diseases : the official journal of National Stroke Association, 2017
Comparing cohorts with similar functional and motor status at admission to inpatient rehabilitati... more Comparing cohorts with similar functional and motor status at admission to inpatient rehabilitation may delineate demographics or impairments associated with recovery from lateropulsion, also known as "pusher syndrome," after stroke based on lesion side. The aim of this case-control study was to determine how demographics and severity of stroke impairments at admission to inpatient rehabilitation distinguish patients who recover from lateropulsion from those who do not. Patients with admission motor Functional Independence Measure (FIM) scores less than 31 and contralesional lower extremity Fugl-Meyer motor scores less than 19 out of 34 were included. Burke Lateropulsion Scales score of 2 or higher at the time of discharge from inpatient rehabilitation indicated persistent lateropulsion; a score of 0 or 1 indicated resolved lateropulsion. Logistic regression tests included age, gender, admission Motricity Index score, limb placement error, and cognitive FIM score. χ(2) ana...
Of 225 patients referred to a dementia clinic, depression occurred in 31 (70%) of 44 patients not... more Of 225 patients referred to a dementia clinic, depression occurred in 31 (70%) of 44 patients not thought to be demented, six (24%) of 25 with cognitive impairment not severe enough to warrant the label dementia, and 24 (15%) of 156 with various forms of dementia, including 19 (19%) of 99 with Alzheimer-type dementia. Follow-up over three years has shown that 16 (57%) of 28 of the depressed, nondemented patients went on to develop frank dementia. Thirteen of these 16 had some sign, often subtle, of organic neurologic disease. Depressed elderly patients with any of the following are at high risk to develop dementia: evidence of cerebrovascular, extrapyramidal, or spinocerebellar disease; a modified Hachinski ischemic score of 4 or greater; a Mental Status Questionnaire score under 8; a dementia behavior score of 7 or higher; or confusion on low doses of tricyclic antidepressants. Dementing illnesses can present as depression with relatively little cognitive impairment.
Pathologic tilt of subjective visual vertical (SVV) frequently has adverse functional consequence... more Pathologic tilt of subjective visual vertical (SVV) frequently has adverse functional consequences for patients with stroke and vestibular disorders. Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) of the supramarginal gyrus can produce a transitory tilt on SVV in healthy subjects. However, the effect of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) on SVV has never been systematically studied. We investigated whether bilateral tDCS over the temporal-parietal region could result in both online and offline SVV misperception in healthy subjects. In a randomized, sham-controlled, single-blind crossover pilot study, thirteen healthy subjects performed tests of SVV before, during and after the tDCS applied over the temporal-parietal region in three conditions used on different days: right anode/left cathode; right cathode/left anode; and sham. Subjects were blind to the tDCS conditions. Montage-specific current flow patterns were investigated using computational models. SVV was sign...
The dexamethasone suppression test (DST) result was found to be abnormal in 49% of patients who w... more The dexamethasone suppression test (DST) result was found to be abnormal in 49% of patients who were an average of seven weeks post stroke. The DST response correlated with depressive symptoms as measured by both the Zung and modified Hamilton Depression scales. The specificity of the DST for clinically diagnosed depression reached 87% for the 8 AM cortisol determination, with a corresponding sensitivity of 47%. It was not related to the patient&amp;amp;#39;s final level of self-care function as measured by the Barthel score, need for nursing home placement following discharge, or duration of rehabilitation needed to achieve maximum benefit. Abnormal responses were more prevalent in cerebral hemisphere than in brain-stem or cerebellar strokes. The more extensive the stroke the more likely the possibility of an abnormal DST response. The DST response is stable, with test-retest replicability being 84% at two weeks and 74% at seven weeks.
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