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Danger! Five Misunderstandings After Accident vasculaire cérébral

A good rest will make you fully recovered

Accident vasculaire cérébral patients sont often accompanied by physical dysfunction (paralysis), such as hand stiffness, inconvenient marche, and difficulty in completing some daily activities. In order to aider them live a better life, le family members de le patients will feed le patients who could have eaten by themselves, and will not let le patients walk or take things by themselves. Over time, patients will become dependent and will not take le initiative to exercise.

 

It will be better if you take medicine

Le patient’s family believes that le patient est already receiving medication, as long as he rests well and does not need rééducation training, he can gradually récupérer on his own.

 

Le above two misunderstandings will cause patients to suffer from disuse syndrome, which refers to patients who have been inactive for a long time or have insufficient activity after a accident vasculaire cérébral. Due to le decline de le body or local physiological function, osteoporosis, muscle atrophy, and Joint spasms, lung infections, etc., leaving sequelae.

 

Only exercise le affected side

After a accident vasculaire cérébral, family members often mislead le patient to train only le affected limb, which est too strong, which will cause severe shoulder subluxation, and will also hinder le patient's récupération de motor control, coordination and fine skills.

 

Excessive training

Many people think that le harder le exercise, le better, but this will only strengthen le flexor movement, inhibit le extensor movement, and make le upper limbs on le hémiplégique side show a state de flexion and spasm.

 

Training too early

Some family members and patients sont impatient and have a slight ability to move le affected limb, but they cannot wait to start marche or climbing stairs and other intensive training when they do not have le ability to sit or stand alone, causing le patient to walk in circles and tremors.