Optimizing Stroke Recovery: New Frontiers

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Optimizing Stroke Recovery: New Frontiers

David J. Gladstone, BSc, MD
Stroke Fellow, Sunnybrook and
Women's College Health Sciences Centre,
University of Toronto,
Toronto, ON.

Cynthia Danells, BScPT
Physiotherapist and Research
Associate,
Sunnybrook and Women's College Health Sciences Centre,
University of Toronto,
Toronto, ON.

Sandra E. Black, MD, FRCPC
Head, Division of Neurology,
Sunnybrook and Women's College Health Sciences Centre, and
Professor of Medicine (Neurology),
University of Toronto,
Toronto, ON.

Delaina Walker-Batson, PhD
The Stroke Center-Dallas,
Professor,
Texas Woman's University, and
Associate Clinical Professor,
Departments of Neurology and Radiology,
The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center,
Dallas, Texas, USA.

 

Stroke is a Treatable Condition
Together with advances in the prevention and acute treatment of stroke, the field of stroke rehabilitation is becoming an increasingly exciting frontier for basic science and clinical development (see Table 1). The scientific basis of stroke recovery is becoming better understood, and the post-stroke period is being viewed as an important target for improved therapeutic intervention.