Therapeutic physical exercise in neural injury: Friend or foe?

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Title
Therapeutic physical exercise in neural injury: Friend or foe?
Author(s)
K Park; S Lee; Y Hong; S Park; J Choi; Kyu Tae Chang; J H Kim; Y Hong
Bibliographic Citation
Journal of Physical Therapy Science, vol. 27, no. 12, pp. 3933-3935
Publication Year
2015
Abstract
[Purpose] The intensity of therapeutic physical exercise is complex and sometimes controversial in patients with neural injuries. This review assessed whether therapeutic physical exercise is beneficial according to the intensity of the physical exercise. [Methods] The authors identified clinically or scientifically relevant articles from PubMed that met the inclusion criteria. [Results] Exercise training can improve body strength and lead to the physiological adaptation of skeletal muscles and the nervous system after neural injuries. Furthermore, neurophysiological and neuropathological studies show differences in the beneficial effects of forced therapeutic exercise in patients with severe or mild neural injuries. Forced exercise alters the distribution of muscle fiber types in patients with neural injuries. Based on several animal studies, forced exercise may promote functional recovery following cerebral ischemia via signaling molecules in ischemic brain regions. [Conclusions] This review describes several types of therapeutic forced exercise and the controversy regarding the therapeutic effects in experimental animals versus humans with neural injuries. This review also provides a therapeutic strategy for physical therapists that grades the intensity of forced exercise according to the level of neural injury.
Keyword
Neurological injuryNeuroprotective effectPhysical exercise
ISSN
0915-5287
Publisher
Society of Physical Therapy Science
Full Text Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1589/jpts.27.3933
Type
Article
Appears in Collections:
1. Journal Articles > Journal Articles
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