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A Basic Primer of the Effect of Stroke on Fine Motor Control

Every forty seconds, someone in the world is suffering from a stroke. Two thirds of the victims survive, mostly from an Ischemic stroke which accounts for 87% of all strokes.

What is an Ischemic Stroke?

An ischemic stroke occurs when there is an obstruction (blood clot) in the blood vessel supplying blood to the brain. Ischemic strokes are not to be confused with Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA) where the obstruction is temporary (an average of a minute) and cause no permanent brain injury.

An ischemic stroke limits blood flow to the brain damaging it. Aside from paralysis, speech defects, and vision problems, ischemic strokes can also impair the body’s fine motor control. Among all impairments stroke victims suffer from, fine motor control is one of the hardest to rehabilitate.

Without proper supervisions, stroke patients find the rehabilitation exercises for fine motor skills to be too demanding and repetitive with frustrating results that they quit halfway.

Fine Motor Control

Fine motor control is the coordinated movement of our skeletal, muscular, and neurological body functions. An example of a fine motor skill is picking up a coin, tying a shoelace, or typing on a keyboard. Stroke patients who have difficulty in performing these kinds of activity suffer a condition called hemiparesis.

There are two common kinds of hemiparesis; Pure Motor Hemiparesis and Ataxic Hemiparesis Syndrome. Pure motor hemiparesis is the most frequent type where stroke victims have face, arm, and leg weakness. Ataxic Hemiparesis Syndrome is the weakness or clumsiness of the body on one side.

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Posted on November 7, 2011

Aphasia After a Stroke: a Common Disability

Speech Therapy

A stroke leaves a lasting imprint in both stroke survivor and his or her immediate family. The brain is primarily affected by the stroke but the whole body bears the brunt of the damage caused by the incident. Some of the lasting effects of a stroke are paralysis, weakness, pain, problems with activities of daily living, cognitive problems, emotional difficulties and speech problems.

One of the most noticeable problems affecting stroke survivors is aphasia which is a form of speech disability resulting from the stroke. Continue reading

Posted on June 13, 2011

Different Types, One Challenge: Depression After a Stroke

“I feel a sense of sadness and joy. Mostly sadness though about what I’ve experienced and sadness about what others have experienced in reference to the stroke.” –Luther Vandross

Stroke is one event that forever alters a man or a woman’s life. And once it occurs, it leaves a lasting impression. Numerous disabilities can result from that major event. Such impairments vary from speech deficits, physical disabilities, problems with cognition and many more. It even includes problems affecting moods and emotions.

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Posted on June 3, 2011