Wednesday, February 16, 2011

I've always told patient's that have the dominant hand affected that it is a good and bad thing. Bad because it is going to make their independence more difficult but good because they will have a natural tendency to use that side more spontaneously. Here's another question to ask regarding this article: "Is it the pre-morbid speed and function of the neurotransmission that is important to determine the likelihood of recovery or just the potential of reconnection itself depending on location of injury?"

3 comments:

Mary Groves said...

Hello David, thank you for your posting. The location of an injury to the cortex is important and the size of the injury. Focal or small lesions have the greatest potential for recovery and plasticity.
Mary

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