The use of kinesiotaping in the neurorehabilitation approach to improve occupational performance in a post-stroke patient
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.20453/rhr.v2023i1.5039Keywords:
stroke, kinesiotaping, occupational performanceAbstract
The present case seeks to increase the functionality of the left upper limb while performing basic activities of daily living. The intervention process in occupational therapy was based on the profession’s frameworks and models for the rehabilitation process: neurodevelopmental framework, Brunnstrom approach, and Bobath approach. Additionally, kinesiotaping was included during functional activities to improve the patient’s performance in basic activities of daily living. Assessments were also used to measure progress in the patient’s occupational performance: Barthel index, Lawton and Brody scale, and Folstein’s Mini-Mental State Examination. Proprioceptive stimuli and using kinesiotaping contributed to the rehabilitation process, which evidenced a better occupational performance of the patient. The Occupational therapy treatment offers frameworks and models based on neurorehabilitation and offers favorable results in recovering voluntary movement in the post-stroke patient.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
All articles published in the Revista Herediana de Rehabilitación are under a Creative Commons Reconocimiento 4.0 International license.
The authors retain the copyright and grant the journal the right of first publication, with the work registered with the Creative Commons License, which allows third parties to use what is published whenever they mention the authorship of the work, and to the first publication in this magazine.
Authors can make other independent and additional contractual agreements for the non-exclusive distribution of the version published in this journal, provided they clearly indicate that the work was published in this journal.
The authors can file in the repository of their institution:
The research work or thesis of degree from which the published article derives.
The pre-print version: the version prior to peer review.
The Post-print version: final version after peer review.
The definitive version or final version created by the publisher for publication.