In 2008, it was proposed that the magnitude of recovery from nonsevere upper limb motor impairment over the first 3 to 6 months after stroke, measured with the Fugl-Meyer Assessment (FMA), is approximately 0.7 times the initial impairment ("proportional recovery"). In contrast to patients with nonsevere hemiparesis, about 30% of patients with an initial severe paresis do not show such recovery ("nonrecoverers"). Hence it was suggested that the proportional recovery rule (PRR) was a manifestation of a spontaneous mechanism that is present in all patients with mild-to-moderate paresis but only in some with severe paresis. Since the introduction of the PRR, it has subsequently been applied to other motor and nonmotor impairments. This more gen...
Background: We aimed to verify the validity of the proportional recovery model for the lower extremi...
Objective: Spontaneous recovery is an important determinant of upper extremity recovery after stroke...
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Motor recovery after stroke can be characterized into two different patterns...
The proportional recovery rule (PRR) posits that most stroke survivors can expect to reduce a fixed ...
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 ...
Background and objective. Spontaneous neurological recovery after stroke is a poorly understood proc...
To investigate (a) the applicability of the proportional recovery rule of spontaneous neurobiologica...
Accurate predictions of motor impairment after stroke are of cardinal importance for the patient, cl...
People with hemiparesis after stroke appear to recover 70% to 80% of the difference between their ba...
The proportional recovery rule states that most survivors recover a fixed proportion (approximate to...
Background and Purpose— Recovery of upper-limb motor impairment after first-ever ischemic stroke is...
Background and objective. Proportional recovery of upper-extremity motor function and aphasia after ...
Objective: Spontaneous recovery is an important determinant of upper extremity recovery after stroke...
The proportional recovery rule asserts that most stroke survivors recover a fixed proportion of lost...
Background: We aimed to verify the validity of the proportional recovery model for the lower extremi...
Objective: Spontaneous recovery is an important determinant of upper extremity recovery after stroke...
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Motor recovery after stroke can be characterized into two different patterns...
The proportional recovery rule (PRR) posits that most stroke survivors can expect to reduce a fixed ...
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 ...
Background and objective. Spontaneous neurological recovery after stroke is a poorly understood proc...
To investigate (a) the applicability of the proportional recovery rule of spontaneous neurobiologica...
Accurate predictions of motor impairment after stroke are of cardinal importance for the patient, cl...
People with hemiparesis after stroke appear to recover 70% to 80% of the difference between their ba...
The proportional recovery rule states that most survivors recover a fixed proportion (approximate to...
Background and Purpose— Recovery of upper-limb motor impairment after first-ever ischemic stroke is...
Background and objective. Proportional recovery of upper-extremity motor function and aphasia after ...
Objective: Spontaneous recovery is an important determinant of upper extremity recovery after stroke...
The proportional recovery rule asserts that most stroke survivors recover a fixed proportion of lost...
Background: We aimed to verify the validity of the proportional recovery model for the lower extremi...
Objective: Spontaneous recovery is an important determinant of upper extremity recovery after stroke...
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Motor recovery after stroke can be characterized into two different patterns...