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Training the 'Good' Arm After Stroke Improves Dexterity in Phase II Trial

Researchers tailored tasks to the injured hemisphere using virtual reality to target specific coordination deficits.

Overview

  • The Penn StateUSC randomized phase II trial enrolled 53 chronic stroke survivors with severe paresis and compared ipsilesional training with standard care.
  • Participants trained three times weekly for five weeks, with assessments at baseline, end of treatment, three weeks, and six months.
  • Those assigned to less-impaired arm therapy improved by about 12%—nearly six seconds—on a standardized dexterity test, with gains sustained at six months.
  • The intervention paired real-world dexterity practice with virtual-reality tasks tailored by side of brain injury, while controls received best-practice therapy for the more-impaired arm.
  • Investigators cite potential improvements in independence and reduced caregiver burden and plan studies that combine this approach with other rehabilitation modalities.