Variability in Motor and Language Recovery during the Acute Stroke Period

Background: Most stroke recovery occurs by 90 days after onset, with proportional recovery models showing an achievement of about 70% of the maximal remaining recovery. Little is known about recovery during the acute stroke period. Moreover, data are described for groups, not for individuals. In thi...

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Main Authors: Lauren E. Dunn, Adam B. Schweber, Daniel K. Manson, Andrea Lendaris, Charlotte Herber, Randolph S. Marshall, Ronald M. Lazar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Karger Publishers 2016-03-01
Series:Cerebrovascular Diseases Extra
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/444149
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spelling doaj-2fa1919b48f9437094290d6db1e4defb2020-11-25T03:21:27ZengKarger PublishersCerebrovascular Diseases Extra1664-54562016-03-0161122110.1159/000444149444149Variability in Motor and Language Recovery during the Acute Stroke PeriodLauren E. DunnAdam B. SchweberDaniel K. MansonAndrea LendarisCharlotte HerberRandolph S. MarshallRonald M. LazarBackground: Most stroke recovery occurs by 90 days after onset, with proportional recovery models showing an achievement of about 70% of the maximal remaining recovery. Little is known about recovery during the acute stroke period. Moreover, data are described for groups, not for individuals. In this observational cohort study, we describe for the first time the daily changes of acute stroke patients with motor and/or language deficits over the first week after stroke onset. Methods: Patients were enrolled within 24-72 h after stroke onset with upper extremity hemiparesis, aphasia, or both, and were tested daily until day 7 or discharge with the upper-extremity Fugl-Meyer Assessment of Motor Recovery after Stroke, the Boston Naming Test, and the comprehension domain from the Western Aphasia Battery. Discharge scores, and absolute and proportional changes were examined using t-tests for pairwise comparisons and linear regression to determine relative contributions of initial impairment, lesion volume, and age to recovery over this period. Results: Thirty-four patients were enrolled: 19 had motor deficits alone, 8 had aphasia alone, and 7 had motor and language deficits. In a group analysis, statistically significant changes in absolute scores were found in the motor (p Conclusions: Over the first week after stroke onset, recovery of upper extremity hemiparesis and aphasia were not predictable on the basis of initial impairment, lesion volume, or age. In addition, patients only achieved about 1/3 of their remaining possible recovery based on the anticipated 70% proportion found at 90 days. These findings suggest that the complex interaction between poststroke structural repair, regeneration, and functional reorganization during the first week after stroke has yet to be elucidated.http://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/444149Stroke recoveryAcute strokeMotor impairmentAphasia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lauren E. Dunn
Adam B. Schweber
Daniel K. Manson
Andrea Lendaris
Charlotte Herber
Randolph S. Marshall
Ronald M. Lazar
spellingShingle Lauren E. Dunn
Adam B. Schweber
Daniel K. Manson
Andrea Lendaris
Charlotte Herber
Randolph S. Marshall
Ronald M. Lazar
Variability in Motor and Language Recovery during the Acute Stroke Period
Cerebrovascular Diseases Extra
Stroke recovery
Acute stroke
Motor impairment
Aphasia
author_facet Lauren E. Dunn
Adam B. Schweber
Daniel K. Manson
Andrea Lendaris
Charlotte Herber
Randolph S. Marshall
Ronald M. Lazar
author_sort Lauren E. Dunn
title Variability in Motor and Language Recovery during the Acute Stroke Period
title_short Variability in Motor and Language Recovery during the Acute Stroke Period
title_full Variability in Motor and Language Recovery during the Acute Stroke Period
title_fullStr Variability in Motor and Language Recovery during the Acute Stroke Period
title_full_unstemmed Variability in Motor and Language Recovery during the Acute Stroke Period
title_sort variability in motor and language recovery during the acute stroke period
publisher Karger Publishers
series Cerebrovascular Diseases Extra
issn 1664-5456
publishDate 2016-03-01
description Background: Most stroke recovery occurs by 90 days after onset, with proportional recovery models showing an achievement of about 70% of the maximal remaining recovery. Little is known about recovery during the acute stroke period. Moreover, data are described for groups, not for individuals. In this observational cohort study, we describe for the first time the daily changes of acute stroke patients with motor and/or language deficits over the first week after stroke onset. Methods: Patients were enrolled within 24-72 h after stroke onset with upper extremity hemiparesis, aphasia, or both, and were tested daily until day 7 or discharge with the upper-extremity Fugl-Meyer Assessment of Motor Recovery after Stroke, the Boston Naming Test, and the comprehension domain from the Western Aphasia Battery. Discharge scores, and absolute and proportional changes were examined using t-tests for pairwise comparisons and linear regression to determine relative contributions of initial impairment, lesion volume, and age to recovery over this period. Results: Thirty-four patients were enrolled: 19 had motor deficits alone, 8 had aphasia alone, and 7 had motor and language deficits. In a group analysis, statistically significant changes in absolute scores were found in the motor (p Conclusions: Over the first week after stroke onset, recovery of upper extremity hemiparesis and aphasia were not predictable on the basis of initial impairment, lesion volume, or age. In addition, patients only achieved about 1/3 of their remaining possible recovery based on the anticipated 70% proportion found at 90 days. These findings suggest that the complex interaction between poststroke structural repair, regeneration, and functional reorganization during the first week after stroke has yet to be elucidated.
topic Stroke recovery
Acute stroke
Motor impairment
Aphasia
url http://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/444149
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