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THE LATEST STROKE RECOVERY NEWS INCL. Mobile Stroke Units & the 86% Reduction in A&E Transfers - ... See MoreSee Less
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Never gave up. Keep exploring options and refused to accept any limits to recovery.
Determination goes a long way during recovery!
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#neurorehab #neurorehabilitation #neuroplasticity #strokeexercise #strokerehabilitation #strokerecovery #strokerecoveryexercises #exerciseafterstroke
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It's New Year's Eve already - and to cap off 2025, a major new study has just been published, from the University of Dundee, which has revealed that Mobile Stroke Units (MSUs) could slash emergency department transfers by a staggering 86%!
These specialised ambulances are like 'hospitals on wheels', equipped with built-in CT scanners and labs that allow medical teams to diagnose and treat patients right at their doorstep. Have you actually seen one of them yet? Let us know please in the comments below if you have...
The research, which followed a successful pilot in the East of England, showed that nearly half of patients (46.4%) could be safely managed at home after a pre-hospital diagnosis, while another 39.6% were sent directly to specialist wards, completely bypassing busy A&E departments.
Beyond saving precious brain cells by starting treatment faster, experts estimate that just one of these units could save the NHS around £1 million annually and prevent 600 unnecessary hospital admissions every year.
Professor Iris Grunwald, who led the research, is now calling for these transformative units to be funded across Scotland to ease pressure on overwhelmed hospitals and provide life-changing care to rural and urban communities alike 🧠⚡️🏥.
www.arni.uk.com
#ARNIStrokeRehab #StrokeCare #ScotlandHealth #NHSInnovation #MobileStrokeUnit #HealthTech2025
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Focusing on rehabilitation is essential for stroke recovery. Keeping a recovery journal while consistently working on your exercises can help survivors see results and stay motivated to continue making progress.
www.arni.uk.com #strokerecovery #neurorehabilitation #neuroplasticity #exerciseafterstroke #strokeexercise #strokerecoveryexercises #strokerehabilitation
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For anyone interested in knowing more about the fascinating history of stroke since the Middle Ages
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link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s42466-020-00082-0
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Historic review: select chapters of a history of stroke - Neurological Research and Practice
link.springer.com
Background There is no shortage of books, chapters and papers on the history of stroke focusing predominantly on the last 150 years and enumerating endless “milestones”. Instead of adding anothe...
This post, about V-Health, is a follow up to our ARNI Stroke Rehab UK post of a few days ago about XR tech✨ This cutting-edge platform, particularly the v-health XR system combines VR with patented FES wearable bands 🦾🎮 called 'eir bands' (!) that wrap around the arm to provide real-time muscle stimulation while you perform tasks in a digital world like reaching for objects or playing specialised games designed to rewire the brain through neuroplasticity 🧠⚡️.
Stroke survivors are finding it far more engaging than standard exercises because it turns repetitive movements into a motivating, gamified experience that you can even do from the comfort of your own living room. Currently, this tech is available at specialist private clinics like VIM Health in West Sussex, which offers intensive rehabilitation packages using state-of-the-art robotics and VR 🏥📍.
It's also being piloted and tested in collaboration with NHS trusts such as Hillingdon Hospitals and academic partners like Brunel University to make it a standard part of UK stroke care pathways 🤝🎓. For those looking for remote options, platforms like v-health Mobile allow clinicians to monitor your progress and adjust stimulation levels wirelessly via a tablet or phone, ensuring you stay on track with the crucial golden window of recovery without constantly traveling to a hospital 📱📉🦾✨
w#ARNIstrokerehabA#VHealthe#neurorehabl#HealthTechUKb#digitalhealth #DigitalHealth
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v-health’s feasibility studies were conducted with stroke survivors and individuals with spinal cord injuries (SCI), in four clinics: the University of Ghent Hospital in Belgium, Hobbs Rehabilitation, Neurokinex and Relive in the UK. Well, I'm sure Hobbs will be wanting to incorporate it in their range of stuff - but I do know people pay an absolute fortune to go there for a week or so (Ive heard of someone paying over £60,000 to do 3 weeks!)
So not privately available yet and even if so probably out with a lot of our price ranges 🤔
A core part of the ARNI approach is to teach stroke survivors how to cope with falls; the most dangerous part of the balance problems caused by stroke.
Survivors (many of whom have the functional use of just one arm) learn how to get down to, and up from, the floor without any kind of external support to pull themselves up with.
www.arni.uk.com
#strokerecovery #ARNIstrokerehab #neuroplasticity #ARNIstrokerehab #arnistroke #neurorehab #arnistrokecharity #strokesurvivorscan
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Constraint-Induced Movement Therapy (CIMT) is a stroke rehabilitation technique that involves restricting your unaffected side while forcing the use of your affected side. It can be quite frustrating if the affected side has severely limited mobility and then the you’re asked to complete exercises with that side for multiple hours per day (as typical CIMT protocol requires).
Although it can be frustrating and aggressive, CIMT has an established track record of helping improve movement after stroke.
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#strokerehabilitation #neurorehab #strokerehab #neuroplasticity #arnistroke #neurorehabilitation #strokesurvivorscan #strokeexercise
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I think I need to do this and step up the hand and finger movements.
Did you know that 'Extended Reality' (XR) is cost-effective and evidence-based complement to stroke recovery 🚀? So what is it?? This innovative tech is basically a combo of Virtual Reality (VR): Fully immersive worlds for tasks, Augmented Reality (AR): Overlays digital info onto the real world (e.g., apps for spatial tasks), Mixed Reality (MR): Blends real and virtual, offering interactive experiences and Haptic Feedback: Devices provide physical sensations to guide movements. And other tech like FES can be bolted on in the mix...
XR is currently being used in hospitals like the Royal Berkshire Hospital and through Belfast Health and Social Care Trust to help survivors regain movement and confidence through immersive, game-like environments 🎮. Unlike traditional physio, which can sometimes feel repetitive or exhausting, XR makes rehabilitation fun by simulating real-world tasks like grocery shopping or navigating public transport in a safe, virtual space 🏥.
While standard tech like robotic gloves (around £60–£100) or high-end treadmills (£4,000+) focus on isolated physical support, XR provides instant visual feedback and data-driven insights that can be 2–3 times cheaper than traditional intensive rehab when delivered remotely 💸.
In fact, major 2025 NHS-funded initiatives from companies like Reneural and eXRt Intelligent Healthcare are now making it possible to access these therapies directly from home 🏠. For those looking to try this tech=, it's increasingly available through specialist NHS units such from the Hillingdon Hospital or private centers like the St John & St Elizabeth Hospital Stroke Rehab Clinic in London 📍.
Whether you are working with an ARNI Stroke Rehab Instructor or using a headset in your living room by yourself, XR is proving to be a powerful supplement to conventional care, helping the brain rewire through plasticity and engaging practice ✨.
www.arni.uk.com
#ARNIStrokeRehabUK #ExtendedReality #HealthTechUK #NeuroRehab #NHSInnovation
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Ever wondered how our ancestors dealt with the 'struck down' mystery of a stroke back in the Middle Ages? 🏰📜 In those days, a stroke or brain haemorrhage was known as Apoplexy, and because it happened so suddenly, people often believed the person had been struck by a divine or supernatural blow...⚡🧠
Medieval doctors followed the theory of the four humours and believed apoplexy was caused by an excess of cold, moist 'phlegm' blocking the flow of spirit to the brain. To fix this, they turned to intense treatments like bloodletting from specific veins or using cupping to draw out the bad humours. 🩸😱 They also used pungent smells like vinegar or burnt feathers to try and 'wake' the patient from their stupor. 👃🔥
But when it came to rehabilitation, they actually understood more than one might think - while they didn't have modern neurophysio, fascinating, famous medical texts like those by Avicenna suggested that survivors should be treated with warm oil massages, gentle exercise and specific diets to regain their strength. 🧴🥖 They recognised that the body needed to be 're-warmed' to regain movement in paralysed limbs.
We even have incredible physical evidence that people survived and were cared for long-term... archaeological studies of medieval skeletons often show disuse atrophy in arm or leg bones, proving that individuals lived for years with hemiplegia. One really famous example is a 2,700-year-old Egyptian mummy buried with a custom-made wooden crutch, showing that their communities didn't just give up on them; they provided the tools to keep them mobile. These are also found in medieval graves/tombs 🩼❤
Contemporary accounts from 'miracle' books at shrines also describe people who had lost their speech or the use of their limbs being brought to holy sites for healing. While they called it a miracle, these records give us a fascinating look at stroke survivors navigating a world without modern medicine. It just goes to show that the human spirit and the drive to recover have been prett#ARNIstrokerehabf#medievalhistoryy#medicalhistoryr#archaeologyRNIStrokeRehab #MedievalHistory #MedicalHistory #Archaeology
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Visitation from god was one name for it too.
Fascinating stuff!
