Latest news for health care topics. Include medical news , health insurance , therapy and vaccine news

Friday, September 9, 2016

New Electrical Stimulation Therapy Can Help Stroke Patients Move Paralyzed Hand : tucson





as declared in tucson

New Electrical Stimulation Therapy Can Help Stroke Patients Move Paralyzed Hand

New Electrical Stimulation Therapy Can Help Stroke Patients Move Paralyzed Hand
New Electrical Stimulation Therapy Can Help Stroke Patients Move Paralyzed Hand
We perform all of our boundary surveys to meet the Arizona Boundary Survey Minimum Standards…


in addition immortal

New Electrical Therapy Helps Patients Move Paralyzed Hands

New Electrical Therapy Helps Patients Move Paralyzed Hands
New Electrical Therapy Helps Patients Move Paralyzed Hands
A new method of electrical therapy can help the brain regain control over a hand that has been paralyzed because of stroke, a new experimental trial shows.Jayme Knutson, the lead researcher on the study and an assistant professor of physical medicine and rehabilitation at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland, explains that this new electrical stimulation therapy essentially rewires the brain so that it can give orders to stroke patients to move their hands.Patients wear a glove bearing sensors on their good hand.


in the same way techtimes

New Electrical Stimulation Therapy Shows Promise Improving Hand Function In Stroke Patients

New Electrical Stimulation Therapy Shows Promise Improving Hand Function In Stroke Patients
New Electrical Stimulation Therapy Shows Promise Improving Hand Function In Stroke Patients
AdvertisementStroke survivors showed improved hand dexterity more when using a new electrical stimulation therapy compared to an existing stimulation technique, said researchers from the MetroHealth System, Cleveland Functional Electrical Stimulation Center and the Case Western Reserve University.Every year, some 800,000 individuals experience strokes in the U.S.The medical condition is characterized by reduced blood flow to the brain and usually results in paralysis or partial paralysis on one side of the body, making it difficult for survivors to open a hand.


No comments:

Post a Comment