Hemiparesis

Stroke and Leg Rehabilitation

A stroke is a disruption in your brain's normal blood supply that can result in brain damage, as well as weakness or paralysis in various parts of the body, including your legs. If you develop leg paralysis or weakness in the aftermath of a...

Physio Exercises for Right-Sided Weakness

Muscle weakness on one side of the body can occur after a stroke or as a result of physical trauma. Called hemiparesis, one-sided weakness -- regardless of which side is affected -- can be improved through therapeutic exercises. Passive and active...

How to Exercise a Hemiplegic Limb

Injury to either side of your brain can result in paralysis of one side of your body, called hemiplegia or hemiplegic limb. This is often the result of a stroke, but can be the result of brain tumors, multiple sclerosis and other brain or nervous...

How to Swim to Strengthen a Weak Side

Weakness on one side of your body, also called hemiparesis, is a common aftereffect of a stroke. Cerebral palsy and other disorders that affect your nervous system or brain are additional possible causes of weakness on one side. By causing...

Isokinetic Strength Training of the Hemiparetic Knee

Hemiparesis is weakness on one side of the body. This is frequently the result of a stroke but is less serious than hemiplegia, which is total paralysis of one side of the body. Because of the reduction in motor control often associated with...

The Best Leg Exercises for Stroke Disability

A stroke occurs when a blood clot or burst blood vessel interrupts the flow of oxygenated blood to the brain. When the brain is deprived of oxygen, nerve cells become damaged and functions controlled by the brain, including memory, speech and...

Yoga & Stroke Recovery

Although yoga is used mainly as a form of fitness in the United States, it is actually a mind/body practice which stems from an ancient system of medicine in India, called Ayurveda. Both Ayurveda and yoga teach more than just physical well being;...

The Effects of a Right Hemisphere Stroke

The two main types of stroke are ischemic, which is caused by an interruption in the brain's blood flow, and hemorrhagic, which is caused by blood leaking into the brain. The way a stroke affects someone depends largely on where in the brain the...

Exercises for the Hemiparetic Knee

According to the National Stroke Association, about 730,000 people suffer strokes each year. About 80 percent of stroke survivors experience mobility problems such as muscle weakness and gait issues due to a condition called hemiparesis, which is...

Early Symptoms of a Stroke

The onset of stroke can be dramatic, but it doesn't have to be. The severity of symptoms experienced during and immediately after the stroke is generally based on the location and size of the infarct. Regardless of size and place, strokes are...

Temodar Side Effects

Temodar is the brand name of temozolomide, which is an antineoplastic drug used to treat brain cancers. It may be administered through injection or as a capsule. It works by attempting to prevent cancer cell growth in the brain. While Temodar is...

Glioblastoma Multiforme Surgery Complications

According to a 2000 article in "Neurosurgery Quarterly" by Dr. Max Kole, primary central nervous system tumors occur in 10,000 to 17,000 patients annually in the United States. Glioblastoma multiforme, the most aggressive brain tumor accounts for...

Conditions That Mimic a Stroke

Stroke, the third leading cause of death in America as reported by the National Stroke Association, occurs when blood flow to the brain is interrupted. A lack of blood and oxygen causes brain cells to die, which interferes with various abilities...

Complications After Stroke

During a stroke, blood flow suddenly fails in a portion of the brain and brain cells quickly begin to die. By definition, strokes damage brain tissue and lead to temporary or permanent neurological complications. According to the Merck Manual, in...

Effects to the Brain After a Stroke

The brain is a highly complex organ divided into specialized regions, each responsible for a specific function. A stroke is a lack of blood supply to the brain and can damage particular areas, resulting in a variety of impairments involving...

Abnormal Symptoms of Shingles

Shingles, also known as herpes zoster, is an infection that is caused by a reactivation, often years later, of the chicken pox virus. The most common symptoms are a painful rash and vesicles, or fluid-filled blisters, that erupt along the area of...

How to Help Weak Legs

Many factors can cause leg weakness. They can include the loss of muscle strength from inactivity, pinched nerves or spinal compression of sciatica, neuromuscular diseases, such as multiple sclerosis, and certain medications. The National...

Symptoms Following Stroke

A stroke is similar to a heart attack, except that it affects the brain. The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) reports that because of this, a stroke may be called a brain attack. Early intervention is key to stroke...

Aftereffects of a Stroke

A stoke is a medical condition caused by the interruption of blood flow to the brain, which causes brain cell death. Immediate side effects of a stroke include headache, dizziness and difficulty with speech or motor coordination. The aftereffects...

Impairments Found in Stroke Patients

Strokes affect people differently. The impairments following a stroke depend on how severe the stroke damage is, as well as where in the brain the stroke took place. Impairments following a stroke may change over time, as the brain heals after its...

Adaptive Products for Stroke Survivors

Many people recover a great deal of function after they have a stroke, but sometimes they still require some assistance with personal care, walking or other daily living skills during the recovery period or indefinitely. Stroke survivors who wish...

After Effects From a Spinal Stroke

Spinal strokes occur when major arteries leading to the spinal cord thicken or close. According to the National Stroke Association, during a spinal stroke, blocked blood flow causes brain cells to die. Complications of such a stroke depend on how...

About Degenerative Disc Disease in the Neck & Back

For unknown reasons, some people develop degenerative disc disease in the spine. This means one or more intervertebral discs lose their mechanical strength and begin to deteriorate. In doing so, they no longer are able to cushion the forces...

About Cervical Spine Degenerative Disc Disease

It is not known why degenerative disc disease in the cervical spine occurs in some people but not in others. The result, however, is that the intervertebral disc weakens and begins to bulge, or herniate. When it bulges enough to push onto the...

About Glioblastoma

Glioblastoma, also known as Glioblastoma multiforme, is a grade 4 type of brain tumor that is almost always fatal. It is an aggressive tumor that involves the glial cells of the brain. According to the International Radiosurgery Association,...

Epstein-Barr Neurological Symptoms

Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV) is a common virus: According to Dr. John Sullivan, writing in the medical database UpToDate, it is estimated that 90 to 95 percent of adults have evidence of being infected by the virus at some time. It commonly causes...

Common Side Effects After a Stroke

The common side effects of a stroke depend greatly on the location of the brain affected by the stroke. Side effects are not always immediately apparent with some manifesting weeks or months after the attack. Most effects are neurologic in nature,...

The Effects of a Left Sided Stroke

A stroke is a loss of blood flow to a certain part of the brain. The resulting damage depends on the location and extensiveness of the stroke. A stroke to the left side of the brain will affect cognitive, motor and sensory areas. Language,...