Stroke Rehabilitation Patients, Practice, and Outcomes: Is Earlier and More Aggressive Therapy Better?

Horn SD, DeJong G, Smout RJ, Gassaway J, James R, Conroy B. Stroke rehabilitation patients, practice, and outcomes: is earlier and more aggressive therapy better? To examine associations of patient characteristics, rehabilitation therapies, neurotropic medications, nutritional support, and timing of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation 2005-12, Vol.86 (12), p.101-114
Hauptverfasser: Horn, Susan D., DeJong, Gerben, Smout, Randall J., Gassaway, Julie, James, Roberta, Conroy, Brendan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Horn SD, DeJong G, Smout RJ, Gassaway J, James R, Conroy B. Stroke rehabilitation patients, practice, and outcomes: is earlier and more aggressive therapy better? To examine associations of patient characteristics, rehabilitation therapies, neurotropic medications, nutritional support, and timing of initiation of rehabilitation with functional outcomes and discharge destination for inpatient stroke rehabilitation patients. Prospective observational cohort study. Five U.S. inpatient rehabilitation facilities. Poststroke rehabilitation patients (N=830; age, >18y) with moderate or severe strokes, from the Post-Stroke Rehabilitation Outcomes Project database. Not applicable. Discharge total, motor, and cognitive FIM scores and discharge destination. Controlling for patient differences, various activities and interventions were associated with better outcomes including earlier initiation of rehabilitation, more time spent per day in higher-level rehabilitation activities such as gait, upper-extremity control, and problem solving, use of newer psychiatric medications, and enteral feeding. Several findings part with conventional practice, such as starting gait training in the first 3 hours of physical therapy, even for low-level patients, was associated with better outcomes. Specific therapy activities and interventions are associated with better outcomes. Earlier rehabilitation admission, higher-level activities early in the rehabilitation process, tube feeding, and newer medications are associated with better stroke rehabilitation outcomes.
ISSN:0003-9993
1532-821X
DOI:10.1016/j.apmr.2005.09.016