Neurorestorative Effects of Constraint-Induced Movement Therapy after Stroke: An Integrative Review

HTML  Download Download as PDF (Size: 137KB)  PP. 253-262  
DOI: 10.4236/nm.2013.44036    7,732 Downloads   13,645 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

Stroke has been considered as one of the main causes of death and of motor and cognitive sequels. Especially, many patients with upper limb hemiparesis improved their motor action and showed meaningful cortical changes after treatment with constraint-induced movement therapy. Therefore, this review aims to verify the literature about neuroimaging and behavioral evidences in the cortical reorganization through the use of the constraint-induced movement therapy. So, we conducted the literature research in indexed journals from many databases like Pubmed, Medline, Cochrane Database, Lilacs and Scielo. We concluded that the behavioral and neuroimaging studies using traditional and modified constraint-induced movement therapy promote cortical reorganization.

Share and Cite:

M. Lucas, P. Ribeiro, M. Cagy, S. Teixeira, F. Chaves, D. Carvalho, C. Peressutti, S. Machado, J. Bittencourt, B. Velasques and R. Piedade, "Neurorestorative Effects of Constraint-Induced Movement Therapy after Stroke: An Integrative Review," Neuroscience and Medicine, Vol. 4 No. 4, 2013, pp. 253-262. doi: 10.4236/nm.2013.44036.

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.