Banner
References
Stroke: valutazione degli effetti del training di rinforzo muscolare
published in September - October 2007 - in Il Fisioterapista - issue n.5

There are no translations available.

Bibliografia

  1. Ouelette MM, LeBrasseur NK, Bean JF et al. High intensity resistance training improves muscle strength, self-reported function and disability in long term stroke survivors. Stroke 2004; 35: 1404-9.

  2. Inaba M, Edberg E, Montgomery J, Gillis MK. Effectiveness of functional training, active exercise and resistive exercise for patients with hemiplegia. Physical Therapy 1973; 53: 28-35.

  3. Duncan P, Richards L, Wallace D et al. A randomized, controlled pilot study of a home-based exercise program for individuals with mild and moderate stroke. Stroke 1998; 29 (10): 2055-60.

  4. Bourbonnais D, Bilodeau S, Lepage Y, Beaudoin N, Gravel D, Forget R. Effect of force-feedback treatments in patients with chronic motor deficits after a stroke. Am J Phys Med Rehabil 2002; 81: 890-7.

  5. Winstein CJ, Rose DK, Tan SM et al. A randomized controlled comparison of upper-extremity rehabilitation strategies in acute stroke: a pilot study of immediate and long-term outcomes. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 2004; 85: 620-8.

  6. Teixeira-Salmela LF, Olney SJ, Nadeau S, Brouwer B. Muscle strengthening and physical conditioning to reduce impairment and disability in chronic stroke survivors. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 1999; 80: 1211-8.

  7. Duncan P, Studenski S, Richards L et al. Randomized clinical trial of therapeutic exercise in subacute stroke. Stroke 2003; 34: 2173-80.

  8. Kim CM, Eng JJ, MacIntyre DL, Dawson AS. Effects of isokinetic strength training on walking in persons with stroke: a double-blind controlled pilot study. Journal of Stroke and Cerebrovascular Diseases 2001; 10 (6): 265-73.

  9. Weiss A, Suzuki T, Bean J, Fielding R. High intensity strength training improves strength and functional performance after training. Am J Phys Med Rehabil 2000; 79 (4): 369-76.

  10. Sharp SA, Brouwer BJ. Isokinetic strength training of the hemiparetic knee: effects on function and spasticity. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 1997; 78: 1231-6.

  11. Engardt M, Knutsson E, Jonsson M, Sternhag M. Dynamic Muscle strength training in stroke patients: effects on knee extension torque, electromyographic activity and motor function. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 1995; 76: 419-25.

  12. Cramp MC, Greenwood RJ, Gill M, Rothwell JC, Scott OM. Low intensity strength training for ambulatory stroke patients. Disability and Rehabilitation 2996; 28 (13-14): 883-9.

  13. Riolo L, Fisher K. Is there evidence that strength training could help improve muscle function and other outcomes without reinforcing abnormal movement patterns or increasing reflex activity in a man who has had a stroke? Physical Therapy 2003; 83 (9): 844-51.

  14. Wilder PA, Sykes J. Using an isokinetic exercise machine to improve the gait pattern in a hemiplegic patient. Physical Therapy 1982; 62 (9): 1291-5.

  15. Patten C, Lexell J, Brown HE. Weakness and strength training in persons with poststroke hemiplegia: rationale, method and efficacy. Journal of Rehabilitation Research & Development 2004; 41 (3a): 293-312.

  16. Morris SL, Dodd KJ, Morris ME. Outcomes of progressive resistance strength training following stroke: a systematic review. Clinical Rehabilitation 2004; 18: 27-39.

  17. Saunders, Greig, Young, Mead. Physical fitness training for stroke patients. The Cochrane Library, The Cochrane Collaboration, 2006; 3.

  18. Sahrmann SA, Norton B. The relationship of voluntary movement to spasticity in the upper motor neuron syndrome. Ann Neurol 1977; 2: 460-5.

  19. Miller G, Light K. Strength training in spastic hemiparesis: should it be avoided? NeuroRehabilitation 1997; 9: 17-28.

Ulteriori riferimenti bibliografici

  • Bobath B. Adult hemiplegia: evalutation and treatment. II edition. Heinemann Medical Books, 1978.

  • Bobath B. Adult hemiplegia: evalutation and treatment. III edition. Butterworth-Heinemann, 1990.

  • Bohannon RW, Andrews AW. Correlation of knee extensor muscle torque and spasticity with gait speed in patients with stroke. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 1990; 71: 330-3.

  • Bohannon RW. Relationship between paretic knee extension strength, maximum weightbearing, and gait speed in stroke patients. Physical Therapy 1991; 71, numero 6 Suppl.: 58-9.

  • Brinkmann JR, Hoskins TA. Physical conditioning and altered-self concept in rehabilitated hemiplegic patients. Physical Therapy 1979; 59: 859-65.

  • Carin-Levy G, Greig C, Young A, Lewis S, Hannan J, Mead G. Longitudinal changes in muscle strength and mass after acute stroke. Cerebrovascular Diseases 2006; 21: 201-7.

  • Davies PM. Passo dopo passo. II edizione. Milano: Springer, 2004.

  • Dean CM, Richards CL, Malouin F. Task-related circuit training improves performance of locomotor tasks in chronic stroke: a randomized, controlled pilot trial. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 2000; 81: 409-17.

  • Dodd KJ, Taylor NF, Damiano DL. A systematic review of the effectiveness of strength training programs for people with cerebral palsy. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 2002; 83: 1157-64.

  • Fielding RA, LeBrasseur NK, Cuoco A et al. High-Velocity resistance training increases skeletal muscle peak power in older women. American Geritric Society 2002; 50: 655-62.

  • Glasser L. Effects of isokinetic training on the rate of movement during ambulation in hemiparetic patients. Physical Therapy 1986; 66 (5): 673-6.

  • Hall G. Come scrivere un lavoro scientifico, II edizione. Edizioni Minerva Medica 1999.

  • Kim CM, Kothari DH, Lum PS, Patten C. Reliability of dynamic muscle peformance in the hemiparetic upper limb. Journal of Neurological Physical Therapy 2005; 29 (1): 9-17.

  • Kligyte U, Lundy-Ekman L, Medeiros JM. Relationship between lower extremity muscle strength and dinamic balance in people post stroke. Medicina 2003; 39 (2): 122-8.

  • Knutsson E, Martensson A, Gransberg L. The effect of concentric and eccentric training in spastic paresis. Scand J Rehab Med 1992; 24 Suppl: 31-2.

  • Kozlowsky BA. Reliability of isokinetic torque generation in chronic hemiplegic subjects. Physical therapy 1984; 64: 714.

  • Liu M, Tsuji T, Hase K, Hara Y, Fujiwara T. Physical fitness in person with hemiparetic stroke. Keio J Med 2003; 52 (4): 211-9.

  • Lum PS, Patten C, Kothari D, Yap R. Effects of velocity on maximal torque production in poststroke hemiparesis. Muscle and Nerve 2004; 30: 732-42.

  • Maeshima S, Ueyoshi A, Osawa A et al. Mobility and muscle strength controlateral to hemiplegia from stroke. Am J Phys Med Rehabil 2003; 82: 456-62.

  • Maynard V, Bakheit A, Shaw S. Comparison of the impact of a single session of isokinetic or isotonic muscle stretch on gait in patients with spastic hemiparesis. Clinical Rehabilitation 2005; 19: 146-54.

  • Monger C, Carr JH, Fowler V. Evalutation of a home-based exercise and training programme to improve sit-to-stand in patients with chronic stroke. Clinical Rehabilitation 2002; 16: 361-7.

  • Moreland JD, Goldsmith CH, Huijbregts MP et al. Torresin. Progressive resistance strengthening exercises after stroke: a sinle-blind randomized controlled trial. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 2003; 84: 1433-40.

  • Nakamura R, Hosakawa T, Tsuji I. Relationship of muscle strength for knee extension to walking capacity in patients with spastic hemiparesis. Tohoku J Exp Med 1985; 145: 335-40.

  • Nakamura R, Watanabe S, Handa T, Morohashi I. The relationship between walking speed and muscle strength in hemiparetic stroke patients: a follow-up. Tohoku J Exp Med 1988; 154: 111-3.

  • Nugent JA, Shurr KA, Adams RD. A dose response relationship between amount of weight-bearing exercise and walking outcome following cerebrovascular accident. Arch. Phys Med Rehabil 1994; 75: 399-402.

  • Olney SJ, Nymark J, Brouwer B et al. A randomized controlled trial of supervised versus unsupervised exercise programs for ambulatory stroke survivors. Stroke 2006; 37: 476-81.

  • Pang MYC, Eng JJ, Dawson AS, Gylfadottir S. The use of aerobic exercise training in improving aerobic capacity in individuals with stroke: a meta-analysis. Clinical Rehabilitation, 2006; 20: 97-111.

  • Pang MYC, Eng JJ, Dawson AS, McKay HA, Harris JE. A community-based fitness and mobility exercise program for older adults with chronic stroke: a randomized, controlled trial. J Am Geriatr Soc 2005; 53: 1667-74.

  • Pang MYC, Eng JJ. Muscle strength is a determinant of bone mineral content in the hemiparetic upper extremity: implications for stroke rehabilitation. Bone 2005; 37: 103-11.

  • Pohl PS, Duncan P, Perera S et al. Rate of isometric knee extension strength development and walking speed after stroke. Journal of Rehabilitation Research & Development 2002; 39 (6): 651-8.

  • Porter MM. Resistance training reccomandations for older adults. Top Geriatric Rehabilitation, 2000; 15(3): 60-9.

  • Potempa K, Lopez M, Braun LT, Szidon P, Fogg L, Tincknell T. Physiological outcomes of aerobic exercise training in hemiparetic stroke patients. Stroke 1995; 26: 101-5.

  • Sayers SP, Bean J, Cuoco A, LeBrasseur NK, Jette A, Fielding RA. Changes in function and disability after resistance training: does velocity matter? A pilot study. Am J Phys Med Rehabil 2003; 82: 605-13.

  • Turton AJ, Britton E. A pilot randomized controlled trial of a daily muscle stretch regime to prevent contractures in the arm after stroke. Clinical Rehabilitation 2005; 19: 600-12.

  • Watkins MP, Harris BA, Kozlowski BA. Isokinetic testing in patients with hemiparesis a pilot study. Physical Therapy, 1984; 64: 184-9.

  • Weightman MM. Motor unit behaviour following cerebrovascular accident. Neurol. Rep., 1994; 18:26-8.

  • Wolman RL, Cornall C, Fulcher K, Greenwood R. Aerobic training in brain-injured patients. Clinical Rehabilitation 1994; 8: 253-7.

  • Yang YR, Wang RY, Lin KH, Chu MY, Chan RC. Task oriented resistance strength training improves muscle strength anf functional performance in individual with stroke. Clinical Rehabilitation 2006; 20 (10): 860-70.


 
There are no translations available.