After unilateral cerebral hemisphere stroke, resulting in contralateral arm symptoms but largely sparing higher cerebral function, ipsilateral arm function is generally considered to be unaffected. In this study, 8 subjects with acute unilateral cerebral infarction (confirmed by CT scan) and primarily motor deficits underwent 11 computerized and 6 clinical assessments between 11 days and 12 months poststroke, and were compared with 12 normal subjects. Computerized tests comprised 3 pursuit tracking tasks (preview-random, step and a combination of these), designed to measure different aspects of integrated sensory-motor (S-M) function, and 12 tasks aimed at breaking tracking into various sensory, perceptual and motor components (joint moveme...
Background. Severity of arm impairment alone does not explain motor outcomes in people with severe i...
The present study hypothesized that side of stroke and level of recovery influence motor system orga...
Background. Severity of arm impairment alone does not explain motor outcomes in people with severe i...
Twenty subjects were examined 4—6 weeks after stroke to establish whether a sensory-motor ipsilatera...
Abstract The possibility to regain motor function after stroke depends on the intactness of motor an...
Objective To investigate somatosensory deficits in the ipsilesional wrist and hand in chronic stroke...
Objective To investigate somatosensory deficits in the ipsilesional wrist and hand in chronic stroke...
Dexterity was investigated in right-handed subjects in the subacute phase of a first unilateral subc...
Proportional motor recovery in the upper limb has been investigated, indicating about 70% of the pot...
BACKGROUND: Proportional motor recovery in the upper limb has been investigated, indicating about 70...
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Functional recovery after cerebral infarction is a complex phenomenon that ...
ObjectiveIpsilateral connectivity from the non-stroke hemisphere to paretic arm muscles appears to p...
Background and purpose: Recent research has shown that following stroke patients can display ipsilat...
The aim of this study was to examine the level and recovery of motor imagery ability (MIA) in the fi...
There are varying degrees of spontaneous improvement in arm paresis over the first 6 months after st...
Background. Severity of arm impairment alone does not explain motor outcomes in people with severe i...
The present study hypothesized that side of stroke and level of recovery influence motor system orga...
Background. Severity of arm impairment alone does not explain motor outcomes in people with severe i...
Twenty subjects were examined 4—6 weeks after stroke to establish whether a sensory-motor ipsilatera...
Abstract The possibility to regain motor function after stroke depends on the intactness of motor an...
Objective To investigate somatosensory deficits in the ipsilesional wrist and hand in chronic stroke...
Objective To investigate somatosensory deficits in the ipsilesional wrist and hand in chronic stroke...
Dexterity was investigated in right-handed subjects in the subacute phase of a first unilateral subc...
Proportional motor recovery in the upper limb has been investigated, indicating about 70% of the pot...
BACKGROUND: Proportional motor recovery in the upper limb has been investigated, indicating about 70...
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Functional recovery after cerebral infarction is a complex phenomenon that ...
ObjectiveIpsilateral connectivity from the non-stroke hemisphere to paretic arm muscles appears to p...
Background and purpose: Recent research has shown that following stroke patients can display ipsilat...
The aim of this study was to examine the level and recovery of motor imagery ability (MIA) in the fi...
There are varying degrees of spontaneous improvement in arm paresis over the first 6 months after st...
Background. Severity of arm impairment alone does not explain motor outcomes in people with severe i...
The present study hypothesized that side of stroke and level of recovery influence motor system orga...
Background. Severity of arm impairment alone does not explain motor outcomes in people with severe i...