Functional exercise and physical fitness post stroke : the importance of exercise maintenance for motor control and physical fitness post stroke
Journal article, Peer reviewed
Copyright © 2012 b. langhammer and b. lindmark. this is an open access article distributed under the creative commons attribution license, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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2012Metadata
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Langhammer, B. & Lindmark, B. (2012). Functional exercise and physical fitness post stroke : the importance of exercise maintenance for motor control and physical fitness post stroke. Stroke research and treatment http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2012/864835Abstract
It is argued that all stroke patients, indifferent of disability, have the same possibility to improve with
training. The aim of the study was to follow and register functional improvements in two groups with
different functional capacities at baseline for a period of 36 months. Stroke patients were recruited
and divided into groups related to their functional status at baseline. During the acute rehabilitation
both groups received functional task-oriented training, followed by regular self- or therapeutic driven
training the first year post stroke and varied exercise patterns the following 24 months. The
participants were tested on admission, and at three, six, twelve and thirty-six months after the onset
of stroke.
Both groups improved functional activity up to six months which then stabilized up to twelve months
for to decline somewhat at thirty-six months post stroke. Change scores indicate a greater potential
for rehabilitation in the MAS<35 in relation to group MAS>35, although the functional capacity was
higher in the latter.
This indicates the importance of maintaining exercise and training for all persons post stroke.