Detail publikačního výsledku

The effect of transcranial direct current stimulation combined with functional task training on motor recovery in stroke patients

MUHAMMAD, A.; SHAHID, B.; W-K, Y.; HAMZA, A.; MUHAMMAD, I.; AL, H.

Originální název

The effect of transcranial direct current stimulation combined with functional task training on motor recovery in stroke patients

Anglický název

The effect of transcranial direct current stimulation combined with functional task training on motor recovery in stroke patients

Druh

Článek recenzovaný mimo WoS a Scopus

Originální abstrakt

The field of neuromodulation encompasses a wide spectrum of interventional technologies that modify pathological activity within the nervous system to achieve a therapeutic effect. Therapy including transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) has all shown promising results across a range of neurological and neuropsychiatric disorders. This article reviews the state-of-the-art of neuromodulation for stroke and discusses the opportunities and challenges available for clinicians and researchers interested in advancing neuromodulation therapy. The annual worldwide incidence of stroke ranges from 27.5 to 63 individuals per 100,000. Stroke, a major cause of adult disability, has devastating effects on patients and their caregivers, which has a tremendous socioeconomic impact on families and healthcare systems around the world. There are only a few treatments available for the improvement of motor function in stroke patients. The majority of these treatments are based on functional motor learning (ML) strategies. Both the mechanisms underlying stroke recovery and the effectiveness of neurorehabilitation interventions still remain poorly understood for widespread implementation, although it strongly depends on the quality of rehabilitation service to reach maximal post-stroke recovery.

Anglický abstrakt

The field of neuromodulation encompasses a wide spectrum of interventional technologies that modify pathological activity within the nervous system to achieve a therapeutic effect. Therapy including transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) has all shown promising results across a range of neurological and neuropsychiatric disorders. This article reviews the state-of-the-art of neuromodulation for stroke and discusses the opportunities and challenges available for clinicians and researchers interested in advancing neuromodulation therapy. The annual worldwide incidence of stroke ranges from 27.5 to 63 individuals per 100,000. Stroke, a major cause of adult disability, has devastating effects on patients and their caregivers, which has a tremendous socioeconomic impact on families and healthcare systems around the world. There are only a few treatments available for the improvement of motor function in stroke patients. The majority of these treatments are based on functional motor learning (ML) strategies. Both the mechanisms underlying stroke recovery and the effectiveness of neurorehabilitation interventions still remain poorly understood for widespread implementation, although it strongly depends on the quality of rehabilitation service to reach maximal post-stroke recovery.

Klíčová slova

Neuromodulation, Neuroengineering, Transcranial direct current stimulation.

Klíčová slova v angličtině

Neuromodulation, Neuroengineering, Transcranial direct current stimulation.

Autoři

MUHAMMAD, A.; SHAHID, B.; W-K, Y.; HAMZA, A.; MUHAMMAD, I.; AL, H.

Rok RIV

2022

Vydáno

09.01.2018

ISSN

1128-3602

Periodikum

European Review for Medical and Pharmacological Sciences

Svazek

22

Číslo

21

Stát

Italská republika

Strany od

7385

Strany do

7392

Strany počet

7

URL

BibTex

@article{BUT178024,
  author="bashir {shahid} and Ali {Hamza} and alsharidah {muhammad} and YOO {W-K} and iqbal {muhammad} and hussain {AL}",
  title="The effect of transcranial direct current stimulation combined with functional task training on motor recovery in stroke patients",
  journal="European Review for Medical and Pharmacological Sciences",
  year="2018",
  volume="22",
  number="21",
  pages="7385--7392",
  doi="10.26355/eurrev-201811-16277",
  issn="1128-3602",
  url="https://www.europeanreview.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/7385-7392.pdf"
}