Skip to main content
Submitted by Dr S. Patel on 28 October 2021

Dr Abhishek Srivastava, Director, Centre for Rehabilitation at Kokilaben Hospital, Mumbai explains the approaches to neurorehabilitation after stroke and how applying the four types of neuroplasticity can help a patient recover and live independently.

Stroke is the leading cause of disability in adults. For Patients, its end of road, for Family its beginning of a burden, for Physicians its interventions, for Organization its investment and for the Nation its loss of Disability Adjusted Life Years. Stroke can affect many parts of the brain causing multiple deficits including, cognitive, behavioral, visual, speech, language, swallow, sensation, movement, muscle tone and sphincter functions.

There are two types of recovery after stroke, first is spontaneous neurological recovery which happens in first 3-6 month primarily due to resolution of local injury and can be modified by newer interventions. The second type is functional recovery and the time period is unlimited!! it’s primarily due to the intensive training triggering newer /alternative electrical circuits in the brain. Similarly, there are two different approaches of neurological rehabilitation, first is compensatory approach, for example, if someone doesn’t have movements in leg causing difficulty in walking and we gave him a stick to walk. Second is remediational approach, in which we try to minimize the impairment or improve power in the leg muscles so a person can walk better and reduce the chances of using a stick to walk. This ability of brain to restore the functional by minimizing the impairment depends upon formation of new / alternative circuits in the brain. This inherent but not widely known ability of the brain to change in response to a triggered stimulus is called as neuroplasticity.

Neuroplasticity, capacity of neurons and neural networks in the brain to change their connections and behaviour in response to new information, sensory stimulation, development, damage, or dysfunction. In fact, for many years, it was considered dogma in the neurosciences that certain functions were hard-wired in specific, localized regions of the brain and that any incidents of brain change or recovery were mere exceptions to the rule, the concept of “Brain cannot Change”. However, since the 1970s and ’80s, neuroplasticity has gained wide acceptance throughout the scientific community as a complex, multifaceted, fundamental property of the brain. “Brain can Change” by two basic concepts in neuroplasticity: Compensation, recruitment of additional brain areas to perform a function and Reorganization, displacement of a primary brain area performing a specific function. Remodeling of neural circuits through plasticity can occur spontaneously or triggered by intensive training (e.g., experience-dependent plasticity) and biological treatments (Pharmacological agents and Transcranial Magnetic and Direct Current Stimulation).

There are four different types of neuroplasticity: map expansion, homologous area adaptation, Compensatory masquerade and Cross-modal reassignment

Map expansion, the first type of neuroplasticity, entails the flexibility of local brain regions that are dedicated to performing one type of function or storing a particular form of information. The arrangement of these local regions in the cerebral cortex is referred to as a “map.” When one function is carried out frequently enough through repeated behaviour or stimulus, the region of the cortical map dedicated to this function grows and shrinks as an individual “exercises” this function. This phenomenon usually takes place during the learning and practicing of a skill such as playing a musical instrument or in task specific training in stroke patients to improve specific function like arm or leg movements, speech, language, cognitive or swallow function. This is the most commonly used approach in neurorehab and utilize task specific training in improving function and I can remember many of my stroke patients, young and old regaining lost abilities with this approach.

Homologous area adaptation occurs during the early critical period of development. If a particular brain module becomes damaged in early life, its normal operations have the ability to shift to brain areas that do not include the affected module. The function is often shifted to a module in the matching, or homologous, area of the opposite brain hemisphere. This concept can help to improve speech and language function after stroke with involvement of dominant lobe. Where in the right brain in right hand dominant person is not involved in speech and language function, can take over function with repeated task specific training. Many of our stroke patients has shown significant improvement from global aphasia to motor aphasia and spontaneous speech production with long term supervised speech language therapy along with pharmacotherapy.

Compensatory masquerade, can simply be described as the brain figuring out an alternative strategy for carrying out a task when the initial strategy cannot be followed due to impairment. One example is when a person attempts to navigate from one location to another. Most people, to a greater or lesser extent, have an intuitive sense of direction and distance that they employ for navigation. However, a person who suffers some form of brain injury or stroke and impaired spatial sense will resort to another strategy for spatial navigation, such as memorizing landmarks. The only change that occurs in the brain is a reorganization of preexisting neuronal networks. This is a simple and novel way by which stroke survivors who were not able to do a complex everyday day task can be trained to do it themselves.

Another form of neuroplasticity, cross-modal reassignment, entails the introduction of new inputs into a brain area deprived of its main inputs. A classic example of this is the ability of an adult who has been blind since birth to have touch, or somatosensory, input redirected to the visual cortex in the occipital lobe of the brain—specifically, in an area known as V1. Sighted people, however, do not display any V1 activity when presented with similar touch-oriented experiments. This occurs because neurons communicate with one another in the same abstract “language” of electrochemical impulses regardless of sensory modality. This strategy is useful to improve visual / auditory functions after stroke.

Most the recent rehabilitation approaches to improve sensory-motor recovery including rehab robotics, virtual reality, mirror training, constraint induced therapy, task specific training intensive locomotor training work on the principles of neuroplasticity. This hold true for improving most of the functions after stroke including cognitive, visual, behavioral, speech, language, swallow, movements, tone or sphincter functions. I have taken example of stroke for simplification but this hold true to most of the diseases of nervous system including traumatic brain injury, multiple sclerosis, early dementia and Parkinsons’s disease, hypoxic and hypoglycemic encephalopathy etc. The rehab process should start as soon as possible, when patient’s are medically stable in the acute stage and continues from intensive care to inpatient wards to day care to outpatient care to home care and then leading to community integration.

I have treated so many patients with massive strokes and brain injury who were thought to remain in vegetative state or bed bound for life are now living independently in the community, thanks to the neuroscience and rehabilitation to unmask this gift of god and to use it to help our stroke and brain injury survivors.

Dr Abhishek Srivastava, MBBS, MD, DNB, PhD

Neurorehabilitation Specialist, Director, Centre for Rehabilitation, 

Kokilaben Hospital, Mumbai

Condition

Stories

  • Picture of stroke survivor Nisha Mistry a grey haired woman in a yellow blouse and the text overlay Stroka Recovery Across Continents
    Stroke Recovery is a Marathon with Ups and Downs
    Nisha Mistry, 59 from Calgary, Canada had a hemorrhagic stroke during peak Covid despite being an active and fit person. She shares her experience of recovery and rehabilitation across Canada and India and the strides she has made through her dogged determination and persistence. 1. Please introduce yourself. My name is Nisha Mistry. I worked Part Time at a Banking Institution and Practiced Reflexology part time. I was eating healthy and an active, healthy individual prior to my stroke walking…
  • आपातकाल के लिए तैयार रहें
    टॉप 7 इमरजेंसी की स्थितियों के बारे में आवश्यक जानकारी
    मेडिकल इमरजेंसी (आपातकालीन स्थिति) कभी भी, किसी भी समय हो सकती है और हमें तुरंत जोखिम में डाल देती हैं। इस लेख में देखें कि ऐसी सात शीर्ष इमरजेंसी के बारे में आपको क्या जानना चाहिए और जानें कि इन्हें बिगड़ने से रोकने के लिए आपको तुरंत क्या करना चाहिए। 1. दिल का दौरा (हार्ट अटैक) सबसे आम और जान को खतरे में डालने वाली इमरजेंसी में से एक है - दिल का दौरा (हार्ट अटैक)। इसे चिकित्सकीय भाषा में मायोकार्डियल इन्फ्रक्शन (एमआई) कहते हैं। तत्काल कार्रवाई से हम हार्ट अटैक के केस में जीवन बचा सकते हैं और इस…
  • A person calling emergency services and the text Be Prepared For Emergencies
    Top 7 Emergencies Everyone Should Know About
    Medical emergencies work on their own timeline. They do not discriminate and when the time comes, time is of essence. Here are the top 7 emergencies everyone should know about and what you should do immediately.    HEART ATTACK One of the most life threatening and commonly encountered emergencies is heart attacks or in medical terms Myocardial Infarction (MI). Immediate action can change the outcome and save lives. What to expect: A heart attack occurs when the plaque mostly made of…
  • स्ट्रोक रीहैब (पुनर्वास): मेरी सबसे बड़ी प्रेरणा आंतरिक है
    स्ट्रोक रीहैब (पुनर्वास): मेरी सबसे बड़ी प्रेरणा आंतरिक है
    सोनल गोरेगांवकर को माउंट एवरेस्ट के बेस कैंप तक चढ़ने के वक्त एक स्ट्रोक हुआ जिससे उनकी बोलने की क्षमता चली गई। इस स्थिति को ग्लोबल एफेशिया (व्यापक वाचाघात) कहा जाता है। इस लेख में उनके सामान्य जीवन को फिर से शुरू करने और काम पर वापस लौटने के लिए आवश्यक उनके धैर्य और दृढ़ संकल्प की कहानी है, और उनके साथ किए गए एक वीडियो साक्षात्कार पर आधारित है। मैं सोनल गोरेगांवकर हूं। मुझे सब लोग बहुत प्यार करते हैं । । मेरा परिवार और दोस्तों के अनुसार मैं एक सहानुभूति रखने वाली, दूसरों का खयाल करने वाली…
  • Shailaja profile picture in a yellow blouse and sari
    गर्भावस्था के दौरान स्ट्रोक होना मेरे लिए एक चेतावनी था
    38 वर्षीया शैलजा बुवनेश्वरी एस को अपनी दूसरी गर्भावस्था के दौरान बिना किसी भी चेतावनी के अचानक स्ट्रोक हुआ। वे इस लेख में बताती हैं कि वे कैसे धीरे-धीरे ठीक हुईं और अपने बच्चों और परिवार की देखभाल करने के लिए उन्होंने कैसे अपनी ताकत फिर से प्राप्त की। कृपया हमें अपनी स्थिति के बारे में कुछ बताएं: मुझे अपनी दूसरी गर्भावस्था के 27वें सप्ताह के दौरान टीआईए (ट्रांसिएंट इस्कीमिक अटैक्स या अस्थायी स्थानिक अरक्तता) हुआ था। यह एक प्रकार का मिनी-स्ट्रोक (अल्प आघात) है। मेरा थ्रोम्बोलिसिस किया गया (रक्त…
  • Stroke During My Pregnancy Was A Wakeup Call
    Shailaja Buvaneswari S,38 suffered a stroke during her second pregnancy, a sudden attack without any warnings, whatsoever. She talks about how she slowly recovered and got back her strength to look after her children and family. Please tell us a bit about your condition: I had a TIA (Transient Ischemic Attack) during my 27th week of pregnancy (second). I was thrombolysed and the baby was monitored for the next one week while I was given mild physiotherapy in the hospital. I was discharged after…
  • Payal in a brown dress holding her mother in a yellow kurta and white dupatta from behind
    पिताजी के स्ट्रोक के बाद पूरा परिवार मेरी माँ (प्राथमिक देखभालकर्ता) का समर्थन कर रहा है
    पायल के पिताजी को स्ट्रोक हुआ, और उस के बाद के वर्षों में पायल ने उनमें होने वाली शारीरिक और मानसिक गिरावट को करीब से देखा है। पायल और उनकी माँ पिताजी की दैनिक देखभाल में सक्रिय भूमिका निभाते हैं और देखभाल समय के साथ कठिन हो रही है। हमें अपने पिताजी की स्थिति के बारे में बताएं मेरे पिताजी को 15 साल पहले ब्रेन स्ट्रोक हुआ था और वे दिन-ब-दिन धीरे-धीरे बिगड़ते जा रहे हैं। उन्होंने अपनी अधिकांश याददाश्त खो दी है और अपने बच्चों के नाम तक याद करने के लिए संघर्ष करते हैं। अकेले रहने पर वे अकसर इधर-उधर…
  • An image with a hand crushing cigarette butts on the left and hands holding a heart to indicate how quitting tobacco saves the heart
    How Quitting Tobacco Improves Heart Health
    Tobacco increases risk of multiple heart diseases. But people who quit tobacco reduce their risk of dying from a heart disease significantly. Read more to understand the consequences of tobacco consumption and the benefits of quitting tobacco. Tobacco can affect the heart and the entire cardiovascular system including the blood vessels. According to the WHO and World Heart Federation, 1.9 million people die from tobacco-related heart diseases every year. Even occasional intake of tobacco and…
  • Rima standing behind her father who is in a wheelchair and has a pillow on his lap
    Writing Made My Father Come Alive In The Novel
    Rima Pande in her debut novel, His Voice, writes a fictionalised narrative about the teeming thoughts swirling in her father’s mind for two years as he lay conscious but paralysed and unable to speak due to two successive strokes in a month. There are great insights into caregiving. Read it. Could you tell us a little bit about the experience that led to your writing ‘His Voice’? My father had two successive strokes within a month, leaving him paralyzed and unable to speak or communicate in any…
  • Stroke Rehabilitation: My Biggest Motivation Is My Inner Self
    Sonal Goregaonkar suffered a stroke while climbing the Everest base camp, which took away her ability to speak, a condition known as Global Aphasia. This is a story of her grit and determination to regain a normal life and get back to work based on a video interview with her. I am Sonal Goregaonkar. I am a loveable soul. My family and friends describe me as an understanding, caring person and an ambitious person. My key pillars of my stroke recovery was my faith in myself, my faith in my…