Physiotherapy
intervention
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Description
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Activities
of daily living (ADLs)
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- difficulties that can
occur after stroke affecting personal, domestic and extended activities
of daily living (e.g. work and driving)
- help the person with
stroke to engage in independent living and social participation.
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Personal
activities of daily living (PADL)
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- basic activities such as washing, dressing,
bathing, going to the toilet, eating and drinking;
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Extended
activities of daily living (EADL)
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- encompass both domestic and community
activities such as shopping, cooking and housework that allow complete
or virtually complete independence.
- These activities also enable community and
social participation.
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Driving
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- it influences self-esteem and mood.
- healthcare professionals need to discuss and
give advice on fitness to drive.
- The current UK regulations regarding driving
are available online (
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/assessing-fitness-to-drive-a-guide-for-medical-professionals).
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Work
and leisure
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- this refers to two related but different
types of activity: productive work (paid or voluntary) and leisure
activities.
- people with stroke may require specialist
advice and support to enable them to resume these activities.
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Arm
function
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- approximately 70% of people experience
altered arm function after a stroke, and this persists for about 40% of
survivors.
- interventions used in routine practice to
improve arm function and those that might help deliver repetitive and
functionally relevant practice.
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Apraxia
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·
difficulty performing purposeful actions due to disturbance
of the conceptual ability to organise actions to achieve a goal.
·
people with apraxia often have problems carrying
out everyday activities such as dressing or making a hot drink despite
adequate strength and sensation.
·
they may also have difficulties in selecting the
right object at the right time or in using everyday objects correctly.
Apraxia can be detected using standardised tools (e.g. Test of Upper Limb
Apraxia [TULIA]) and is usually associated with damage to the left cerebral
hemisphere.
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Attention
and concentration
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- disturbed alertness is
common after stroke especially in the first few days and weeks, and more
so in non-dominant hemisphere stroke.
- attention impairments may persist in
the longer term and may be specific (e.g. focusing, dividing or
sustaining attention) or more generalised, affecting alertness and speed
of processing and be evident in poor engagement or general slowness.
- attention problems may
lead to fatigue, low mood and difficulty with independent living.
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Executive
function
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- refers to the ability to
plan and execute a series of tasks, inhibit inappropriate automatic
impulses, regulate emotional responses, foresee the consequences of
actions and make judgments about risk.
- ‘dysexecutive syndrome’ encompasses
various impairments, including difficulties with problem solving,
planning, organising, initiating, inhibiting and monitoring behaviour.
- these can be detected
using standardised tools (e.g. the Behavioural Assessment of the
Dysexecutive Syndrome [BADS]).
- executive functions rely
heavily upon attention and are associated with deficits in everyday
function and independence.
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Spatial
awareness
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- problems with spatial
awareness (also referred to as visual spatial neglect, sensory
inattention etc.) refer to a reduced awareness of some part of the
person’s body or their environment.
- it is more common in people with
non-dominant hemisphere stroke (typically causing left -sided neglect)
and those with hemianopia.
- behavioural symptoms
include bumping into objects on the affected side or only reading one side
of pages in newspapers or books.
- neglect can be detected
using standardised assessments ( e.g. the Behavioural Inattention Test).
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Weakness
and ataxia
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- stroke frequently results
in weakness, lack of co-ordination of movement (ataxia) and loss of
selective movement.
- weakness on one side of
the body (hemiparesis or hemiplegia) is a hallmark of stroke, affecting
around 80% of people with stroke. It causes substantial disability,
mainly through limiting mobility but also in affecting arm function.
- ataxia occurs in around 3%
of ischaemic strokes, principally in cases involving the cerebellum but
also as a consequence of severe sensory dysfunction (known as sensory
ataxia).
- Examples of standardised
measures of motor impairment include the Motricity Index and the Scale
for the Assessment and Rating of Ataxia (SARA).
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Balance
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- many people experience
difficulty with balance after stroke.
- this is usually due to a
combination of reduced limb and trunk motor control, altered sensation
and sometimes centrally determined alteration in body representation
such that the person misperceives their posture in relation to the
upright.
- impaired balance reduces confidence and
increases the risk of falls on walking.
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Falls
and fear of falling
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- people with stroke are at
high risk of falls at all stages in their recovery.
- stroke-related balance
deficits include reduced postural stability during standing and delayed
and in co-ordinated responses to both self-induced and external
perturbations.
- gait deficits include
reduced propulsion at push-off, decreased hip and knee flexion at
swing-phase and reduced stability at stance-phase.
- the high incidence of
falls may be attributable to impairments of cognitive function, motor
weakness, dual tasking and the planning and execution of tasks.
- non-stroke factors that
increase the risk of falling in older people (e.g. multiple medications)
are also common in people with stroke.
- falls may have serious physical and
psychological consequences, including an increased risk of hip fracture
(usually on the weaker side) and greater mortality and morbidity
compared to people without stroke.
- fear of falling may lead to decreased
physical activity, social isolation and loss of independence.
- interventions to prevent
falls include education and adaptations e.g. low bed, chair alarms and
are often multi-factorial, addressing physical and psychological
aspects.
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Walking
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- the highest priority for
many people with limited mobility after stroke is to walk independently.
- the treatments and
equipment aimed at improving walking and includes exercise.
- orthoses are external
devices that support or enhance an impaired limb; commonly used after
stroke are ankle-foot orthoses (AFOs) to support a hemiplegic foot and
ankle.
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Spasticity
and contracture
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- spasticity can cause
discomfort or pain for the person with stroke, difficulties for carers
and is associated with activity limitation.
- spasticity is common,
especially in a non-functional arm- estimates of prevalence vary from 19%
to 43% depending on the timing of assessment.
- any joint that does not
move frequently is at risk of developing shortening of surrounding
tissues leading to restricted movement and this is referred to as a
contracture, and is not uncommon in limbs affected by spasticity.
- contractures can impede
activities such as washing or putting on clothes, and may also be
uncomfortable or painful and limit the ability to sit in a wheelchair or
mobilise.
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Splinting
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- the process of applying a
prolonged stretch through an external device, most commonly splints or
serial casts, to prevent or treat contractures.
- Splinting is used to help
manage tone, reduce pain and improve range of movement and function
(passive and active). Standardised measures for ease of care and
resistance to passive stretches include the Arm Activity measure and
modified Ashworth Scale respectively.
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