Community rehabilitation outcomes for different stroke diagnoses: An observational cohort study

Elly Williams, Hayley Jackson, Janet Wagland, Angelita Martini

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Objective
To determine the differences in functional and cognitive rehabilitation gains made in community-based rehabilitation following a stroke based on stroke diagnosis (left or right hemisphere, hemorrhagic, or ischemic).
Design
A 12-month follow-up observational retrospective cohort study.
Setting
Staged community-based brain injury rehabilitation.
Participants
Clients (N=61) with hemorrhagic left brain stroke (n=10), hemorrhagic right brain stroke (n=8), ischemic left brain stroke (n=27), or ischemic right brain stroke (n=16) participating in rehabilitation for at least 12 months.
Intervention
Not applicable.
Main Outcome Measures
The Mayo-Portland Adaptability Inventory-4 (MPAI-4) was completed at admission and 12 months post admission to staged community-based brain injury rehabilitation by consensus of a multidisciplinary team.
Results
After 12 months in staged community-based brain injury rehabilitation, the study population made significant gains in Total (P<.001) and across Ability (P<.001) and Participation (P<.001) subscales of the MPAI-4. All diagnostic groups made significant gains in Participation T-scores, and no groups made significant gains in Adjustment. The ischemic left and right hemisphere stroke groups also made significant gains in Ability and Total T-scores from admission to 12 months. Clients with ischemic left hemisphere stroke had more severe limitations in motor speech (P<.05) than clients with right hemisphere stroke at admission and/or review and were also more impaired in verbal communication (P<.01) than the hemorrhagic right hemisphere group at admission.
Conclusions
There are some differences in outcomes on presentation to rehabilitation based on type of stroke; there are also differences in rehabilitation gains. Improvement in physical ability does not always translate to improvement in social participation and independence; those with right brain stroke need further assistance to translate physical gains into participatory outcomes.
Original languageEnglish
Article number100047
JournalArchives of Rehabilitation Research and Clinical Translation
Volume2
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2020

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