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Bibliografia
Ictus ischemico cronico: training aerobico con treadmill
pubblicato nel Maggio - Giugno 2012 ne Il Fisioterapista - fascicolo n.3

Bibliografia

  1. Schwartz RS, Buchner DM. Exercise in the elderly: physiological and functional effects. In: Hazard WR, editor. Principles of geri-atric medicine and gerontology. 3rd ed. New York: McGraw-Hill; 1994; p. 91-105.

  2. Potempa KL, Lopez M, Braun LT, et al. Physiological outcomes of aerobic exercise training in hemiparetic stroke patients. Stroke, 1995; 26: 101-5.

  3. Hess S, Bertelt C, Schaffrein A, Malezic M, Maurtiz K. Restoration of gait in nonambulatory hemiparetic patients by treadmill training with partial body-weight support. Arch Phys Med Rehabil, 1994; 75: 1087-93.

  4. Visintin M, Barbeau H, Korner-Bitensky N, Mayo NE. A new approach to retrain gait in stroke patients through body weight support and treadmill stimulation. Stroke, 1998; 29: 1122-8.

  5. Nudo RJ, Barbay S, Kleim JA. Role of neuroplasticity in func- tional recovery after stroke. In: Grafman J, Levin HS (eds). Cerebral reorganization of function after brain injury: implications for rehabilitation. New York: Oxford Univesity Press; 2000; p. 168-97.

  6. Macko RF, DeSouza CA, Tretter LD, et al. Treadmill aerobic exercise training reduces the energy expenditure and cardiovascular demands of hemiparetic gait in chronic stroke patients. A preliminary report. Stroke. 1997; 28(2): 326-30.

  7. Macko RF, Katzel LI, Yataco A, et al. Low-velocity graded treadmill stress testing in hemiparetic stroke patients. Stroke. 1997; 28(5): 988-92.

  8. Taub E. Somatosensory deafferentation research with monkeys: implications for rehabilitation medicine. In: L. Ince (ed.) Behavioural Psychology in Rehabilitation Medicine: Clinical Application. New York: Williams & Wilkins, 1980.

  9. Ryan A, Dobrovolny L, Silver K et al. Cardiovascular fitness after stroke: role of muscle mass and gait deficit severity. J Stroke Cerebrovasc Disorders, 2000; 9:1-8.

  10. Jorgensen H, Nakayama H, Raaschou H et al. Recovery of walking function in stroke patients: the Copenhagen Stroke Study. Arch Phys Med Rehabil, 1995; 76:27-32.

  11. Macko RF, Smith GV, Dobrovolny CL, et al. Treadmill training improves fitness reserve in chronic stroke patients. Arch Phys Med Rehabil, 2001; 82(7): 879-84.

  12. Pearson KG, Rossignol S. Fictive motor patterns in chronic spinal cats. J Neurophysiol, 1991 Dec; 66(6): 1 874-87.

  13. de Guzman CP, Roy RR, Hodgson JA, Edgerton VR. Coordination of motor pools controlling the ankle musculature in adult spinal cats during treadmill walking. Brain Res, 1991 Aug 2; 555(2): 202-14.

  14. Lovely RG, Gregor RJ, Roy RR, Edgerton VR. Weight-bearing hindlimb stepping in treadmill-exercised adult spinal cats. Brain Res, 1990 Apr 30; 514(2): 206-18.

  15. McCain KJ, Smith PS, Polo FE, Coleman SC, Baker S. Excellent outcomes for adults who experienced early standardized treadmill training during acute phase of recovery from stroke: a case series. Top Stroke Rehabil, 2011 Jul-Aug; 18(4): 428-36.

  16. Moseley AM, Stark A, Cameron ID, Pollock A. Treadmill training and body weight support for walking after stroke. Cochrane Database Syst Rev, 2005 Oct 19;(4): CD002840. Review.

  17. Macko RF, Ivey FM, Forrester LW. Task-oriented aerobic exercise in chronic hemiparetic stroke: Training protocols and treatment effects. Top Stroke Rehabil, 2005; 12(1): 45-57.

  18. Silver KH, Macko RF, Forrester LW, Goldberg AP, Smith GV. Effects of aerobic treadmill training on gait velocity, cadence, and gait symmetry in chronic hemiparetic stroke: a preliminary report. Neurorehabil Neural Repair, 2000;14(1): 65-71.

  19. Harris-Love M, Macko R, Whitall J. Improved hemiparetic muscle activation in treadmill versus overground walking. Neurorehabil Neural repair, 2004; 18: 154-60.

  20. Schmidt R, Lee T. Motor control and Learning: a behavioural emphasis. Champaign (IL): Human Kinetics, 1999.