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Results for "How do I use mirror therapy for an adult with cerebellar stroke?" · 6 sources · 1.3s
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Cerebellar stroke results from infarction or haemorrhage within the posterior fossa, disrupting cerebellar circuits responsible for motor coordination, balance, and fine motor control. Common sequelae include limb ataxia, dysmetria, gait instability, intention tremor, and dysarthria. Unlike cortical stroke, primary motor strength is typically preserved; deficits are coordination-based. Corticospinal involvement may be present where lesions extend to the cerebellar peduncles or brainstem, influencing the suitability of interventions such as mirror therapy.
| Phase | Domain | Interventions | Progression Criteria |
|---|---|---|---|
| Weeks 1–4 | Foundation | Frenkel coordination exercises (UL/LL). Supported sitting balance. Trunk stabilisation. Mirror therapy if corticospinal involvement confirmed on MRI — 30 min/day, bilateral UL movements. | SARA reduction ≥2 pts; safe unsupported sitting ≥5 min |
| Weeks 5–8 | Functional | Task-specific training: meal preparation, kitchen safety. Progressive balance training — supported standing to tandem stance. Gait retraining with walking aid reduction. Fine motor: utensil use, writing, fastening. | BBS ≥45; ambulation with 1 point aid; ARAT ≥30/57 |
| Weeks 9–16 | Community | Unassisted gait on varied surfaces. Community mobility and transport. Cognitive-motor dual-task training. Driving readiness assessment (UFOV, reaction time). Referral to OT driving assessor. | BBS ≥50; independent community ambulation; UFOV within normal limits |
| Weeks 17–52 | Maintenance | Home program consolidation. Review meal preparation independence. On-road driver assessment with OT-DA. Telehealth check-ins monthly. Discharge planning and community re-integration. | 12-month goal attainment; independent in all target ADLs |
Mirror therapy is supported by Level I evidence for cortical stroke (Thieme et al., 2018). For cerebellar presentations, evidence is emerging but limited; clinical decision-making should be guided by confirmed corticospinal involvement on neuroimaging. Coordination-focused rehabilitation (Frenkel, task-specific training) is the primary evidence-based approach (Stanton et al., 2021). The Stroke Foundation Australia (2023) Clinical Guidelines support a graded, goal-directed rehabilitation program that integrates client priorities — functional independence, mobility, and return to occupation (Stroke Foundation, 2023).
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