Stroke is a common and frequently-occurring disease, which seriously endangers human health. Rehabilitation treatment can effectively reduce the disability rate of stroke and improve the quality of life. The tertiary rehabilitation treatment system for stroke can effectively improve the motor function of stroke patients and improve the quality of life. This paper focuses on the choices and methods of physical therapy and occupational therapy at all levels of the hospitals and in different periods of the disease. It also aims to summarize the tertiary rehabilitation strategy for motor dysfunction in stroke patients, to provide references for all levels of hospitals and communities, achieve standardization and unification of rehabilitation treatment, as well as the rehabilitation efficacy of homogeneity.
Central pathway and postural control (CPPC) technique is a neurorehabilitation physiotherapy technique developed by the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine of West China Hospital of Sichuan University. The technique focuses on the internal mechanism and external manifestation of the central nervous conduction pathway of postural control, and uses neuroscience theory to explain and analyze the dysfunction of patients. Clinical practice and research results show that CPPC technique has good curative effect and application prospect. This paper mainly introduces the basic principles and core concepts of CPPC technique, commonly used evaluation and treatment methods, achievements and application promotion in recent years, and aims to provide a theoretical reference and guidance for further application and in-depth research of this technique.
With the continuous development of critical care medicine, the survival rate of critical ill patients continues to increase. However, the residual dysfunction will have a far-reaching impact on the burden on patients, families, and health-care systems, and will significantly increase the demand of the follow-up rehabilitation treatment. Critical illness rehabilitation intervenes patients who are still in the intensive care unit (ICU). It can prevent complications, functional deterioration and dysfunction, improve functional activity and quality of life, shorten the time of mechanical ventilation, the length of ICU stay and hospital stay, and also reduce medical expenses. Experts at home and abroad believe that early rehabilitation of critical ill patients is safe and effective. So rehabilitation should be involved in critical ill patients as early as possible. However, the promotion of this model is still limited by the setting of safety parameters, the ICU culture, the lack of critical rehabilitation professionals, and the physiological and mental cognitive status of patients. Rehabilitation treatment in ICU is constantly being practiced at home and abroad.