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Regaining Strength After Stroke

Kinesiologists and Neuro-Motor Control Specialists Help Stroke Victims Regain Use of Arms with New At-Home Rehab Device

May 1, 2011

Kinesiologists and neuro-motor control specialists developed a device to help stroke victims improve motor function. The device is designed to help regain use of the affected arm by independently working it and the unaffected arm. The patient simply sits with the device fixed in front of him or her and slides one handle in each hand along a track, keeping in rhythm with a clicking sound. Repeated use of the affected arm stimulates the part of the brain in control of movement, allowing the patient to regain strength and function.

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Science Insider

ABOUT STROKES: A stroke is a type of cardiovascular disease that affects the arteries leading to and from the brain. When one of these becomes blocked, or bursts, blood and oxygen can't get to that part of the brain and it begins to die. Strokes can cause paralysis, affect language and vision, and lead to memory loss. Strokes kill nearly 163,000 people every year; it is the third leading cause of death, behind heart disease and cancer.

ABOUT MOTOR FUNCTION: Even a simple motor movement involves many different regions of the body, but the primary motor cortex of the brain is one of the most important. It sends out electrical impulses through nerve cells called neurons that control the execution of movement. Every part of the body is represented in the primary motor cortex; the left side of the brain controls the right side of the body, and vice versa. Certain diseases or brain damage can disrupt these basic functions. For instance, cerebral palsy is a disorder that affects body movement and muscle coordination because of brain damage, which interferes with messages from the brain the body, and vice versa.

The Human Factors and Ergonomics Society contributed to the information contained in the TV portion of this report.

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New In-Home Stroke Rehab Device

To Go Inside This Science:

Karen A. Robinson
Senior Media Relations Specialist
University of Maryland School of Medicine
mrodgers@som.umaryland.edu

Lois Smith
Human Factors and Ergonomics Society
lois@hfes.org
310-394-1811