The proportional recovery rule asserts that most stroke survivors recover a fixed proportion of lost function. To the extent that this is true, recovery from stroke can be predicted accurately from baseline measures of acute post-stroke impairment alone. Reports that baseline scores explain more than 80%, and sometimes more than 90%, of the variance in the patients’ recoveries, are rapidly accumulating. Here, we show that these headline effect sizes are likely inflated. The key effects in this literature are typically expressed as, or reducible to, correlation coefficients between baseline scores and recovery (outcome scores minus baseline scores). Using formal analyses and simulations, we show that these correlations will be extreme when...
Background and Purpose—There is a lack of agreement regarding measuring the effects of stroke treatm...
Copyright © 2014 Bruce Ovbiagele et al.This is an open access article distributed under theCreativeC...
Introduction Stroke causes different levels of impairment and the degree of recovery varies greatly ...
The proportional recovery rule asserts that most stroke survivors recover a fixed proportion of lost...
The proportional recovery rule states that most survivors recover a fixed proportion (≈70%) of lost ...
The proportional recovery rule states that most survivors recover a fixed proportion (approximate to...
The proportional recovery rule (PRR) posits that most stroke survivors can expect to reduce a fixed ...
Accurate predictions of motor impairment after stroke are of cardinal importance for the patient, cl...
In 2008, it was proposed that the magnitude of recovery from nonsevere upper limb motor impairment o...
People with hemiparesis after stroke appear to recover 70% to 80% of the difference between their ba...
Background and Purpose— There is a lack of agreement regarding measuring the effects of stroke treat...
Background and Purpose— Recovery of upper-limb motor impairment after first-ever ischemic stroke is...
Purpose. ‘Plateau ’ is an expression frequently used in relation to decisions to discharge patients ...
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Motor recovery after stroke can be characterized into two different patterns...
Background and objective. Spontaneous neurological recovery after stroke is a poorly understood proc...
Background and Purpose—There is a lack of agreement regarding measuring the effects of stroke treatm...
Copyright © 2014 Bruce Ovbiagele et al.This is an open access article distributed under theCreativeC...
Introduction Stroke causes different levels of impairment and the degree of recovery varies greatly ...
The proportional recovery rule asserts that most stroke survivors recover a fixed proportion of lost...
The proportional recovery rule states that most survivors recover a fixed proportion (≈70%) of lost ...
The proportional recovery rule states that most survivors recover a fixed proportion (approximate to...
The proportional recovery rule (PRR) posits that most stroke survivors can expect to reduce a fixed ...
Accurate predictions of motor impairment after stroke are of cardinal importance for the patient, cl...
In 2008, it was proposed that the magnitude of recovery from nonsevere upper limb motor impairment o...
People with hemiparesis after stroke appear to recover 70% to 80% of the difference between their ba...
Background and Purpose— There is a lack of agreement regarding measuring the effects of stroke treat...
Background and Purpose— Recovery of upper-limb motor impairment after first-ever ischemic stroke is...
Purpose. ‘Plateau ’ is an expression frequently used in relation to decisions to discharge patients ...
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Motor recovery after stroke can be characterized into two different patterns...
Background and objective. Spontaneous neurological recovery after stroke is a poorly understood proc...
Background and Purpose—There is a lack of agreement regarding measuring the effects of stroke treatm...
Copyright © 2014 Bruce Ovbiagele et al.This is an open access article distributed under theCreativeC...
Introduction Stroke causes different levels of impairment and the degree of recovery varies greatly ...