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Mirror Therapy for Stroke Patients: How It Helps with Paralysis Recovery

Mirror therapy after stroke is a unique rehabilitation technique that can help individuals improve mobility in the hand and arms — and sometimes even legs. The most attractive aspect of mirror therapy for stroke patients is that it is accessible to survivors with extremely limited mobility and even post-stroke paralysis.

To learn how mirror therapy for stroke patients works, it’s important to understand the role of mirror neurons and the phenomenon of neuroplasticity. This article will discuss how mirror therapy can help you improve function and the best way to practice it and promote recovery.

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What Is Mirror Therapy?

Mirror therapy is a therapeutic intervention first introduced to help relieve phantom limb pain, which occurs when an individual experiences pain in their amputated limb. It involves using a tabletop mirror to create a reflection of your arm or hand. The mirror is always placed over the affected side, and the non-affected side is in the reflection.

Then, the individual uses the non-affected arm to perform various arm and hand exercises while watching the reflection in the mirror. Practicing movements with your unaffected limb helps “trick” the brain into thinking that you’re moving your affected arm even though you aren’t.

Mirror therapy helps relieve phantom pain by helping the brain recognize and “feel” the arm. Studies have shown that after numerous sessions mirror therapy can help reduce pain.

In order to move your arm, motor neurons (chemical messengers) fire in the brain to tell your muscles in your arm to move. Mirror neurons, however, fire when you perform a movement or simply see a movement. Mirror therapy provides the visual feedback necessary to help mirror neurons fire by simply seeing the movement. As a result, your brain gets the feedback necessary to spark the rewiring process called neuroplasticity.

The Importance of Neuroplasticity for Stroke Recovery

Neuroplasticity is the brain’s ability to heal and rewire itself after a neurological injury like a stroke. It is best activated through high repetition of therapeutic exercises, or massed practice. Neuroplasticity strengthens neural pathways (connections) and creates new ones. This helps the brain communicate better with the affected muscles. Thus, the stronger the neural pathways become, the higher the chances of restoring function.

After a stroke, many neural pathways become damaged or destroyed which can impair certain functions. Fortunately, neuroplasticity allows healthy parts of the brain to take over lost function. For example, when the brain has trouble sending signals to the arm or hand after a stroke, neuroplasticity allows new areas of the brain to take over hand and arm function.

Neuroplasticity is activated by repetitive stimulus. For example, when you practice a skill consistently such as hand therapy exercises, it helps the brain rewire itself and strengthen the pathways that control hand function. Thus, mirror therapy can help activate neuroplasticity and promote overall recovery.

How Mirror Therapy Can Help Improve Mobility After Stroke

Mirror therapy is often used in rehabilitation clinics to help survivors improve mobility, especially after a stroke. Even though it seems like a simulation, mirror therapy provides many benefits.

Benefits of mirror therapy exercises after stroke include:

  • Hand and/or arm paralysis can improve. Studies have shown that the most common application for mirror therapy is to improve upper extremity function, and best of all – patients don’t need any preexisting movement to benefit from this therapy.
  • Leg mobility may increase. Although mirror therapy is often used on the upper extremities, studies show that it can also be used to improve leg function, but a bigger mirror will be required.
  • Post-stroke pain can be reduced. One study found that mirror therapy helped reduce post-stroke pain in a survivor 5 years after a thalamic stroke. While this study is very limited, it provides hope for a condition where treatment options may otherwise be limited.
  • Activities of daily living may be easier to perform. After a stroke, it can be challenging for many survivors to return to their daily activities. For this reason, many therapists strive to help survivors get better at self-care tasks with mirror therapy. Studies found that mirror therapy can improve an individual’s ability to perform self-care.
  • Hemineglect may improve. This condition involves an attention deficit on the affected side. Although research is limited, some believe that mirror therapy may help improve visuospatial neglect, or hemineglect, in stroke survivors.
  • Low-risk treatment option after stroke. Mirror therapy is considered a safe and affordable therapeutic intervention as it simply involves a tabletop mirror and gentle exercises.

Another benefit from mirror therapy is that it can be done with your therapist in a clinical setting, or it can be done at home on your own. In the next section we’ll discuss how you can perform mirror therapy exercises after stroke safely and independently.

How to Practice Mirror Therapy After Stroke

Practicing mirror therapy after stroke can be done with the help of a therapist or on your own. The following video and instructions are provided to illustrate how to practice mirror therapy for the hands specifically. However, if you want to target arm or leg mobility, simply adjust the protocol for that limb.

Here is a video from Bob & Brad (the “most famous physical therapists on the internet”) to help demonstrate mirror therapy:

Here are steps you can follow to perform mirror therapy:

  1. Place a tabletop mirror over your affected arm and hand, with the non-affected arm resting on the table next to the mirror, ensuring that it is fully in view in the reflection.
  2. Spend a few minutes observing the reflection and getting situated with the optical illusion.
  3. It can be helpful to think of the mirror as a window, instead of a reflection. This can help further “trick” your brain into thinking that you’re viewing your affected side.
  4. Then, begin by practicing simple hand therapy exercises with your non-affected hand. This can include touching your thumb to your fingertips, making a fist and then opening the hand, or turning your palm up and down.
  5. Complete these mirror therapy stroke exercises for at least 10 minutes, working your way up to half-hour sessions. Make sure to keep your eyes on the reflection in the mirror the entire time.

It’s important to be strategic and repetitive with your mirror therapy exercises. Practicing specific hand exercises repetitively will help activate neuroplasticity. The more you practice mirror therapy exercises, the more your brain will rewire itself, and the higher the chances of restoring hand and/or arm function.

Combining Mirror Therapy Exercises with MusicGlove

The thumb-to-fingertip hand exercise is often used in mirror therapy. This gentle movement helps stimulate neuroplasticity and provides a stepping stone to improving hand mobility. Similarly, like in mirror therapy, this hand exercise is a common movement in MusicGlove hand therapy.

illustration of music glove which can be used in mirror therapy

MusicGlove is a neurorehab device designed to improve hand function after stroke. It motivates you to achieve high repetition of hand therapy exercises through a fun, interactive game. Best of all, the device has been clinically proven to improve hand function in 2 weeks.

However, MusicGlove does require some preexisting movement to get started, which can limit survivors with hand paralysis from using the device. To work around this limitation, some therapists have combined MusicGlove with mirror therapy by placing the glove on the survivor’s non-affected hand. 

While the survivor is practicing hand exercises with their mobile hand, the affected hand behind the mirror may eventually start to develop twitches, which is a sign of movement slowly returning due to the power of mirror neurons and neuroplasticity. Of course, this is not the way that MusicGlove was intended to work, but therapists have self-reported positive results with this approach.

Here’s a video from Helen Hayes hospital showing a demonstration of MusicGlove:

If you’re looking for a motivating way to stay engaged in mirror therapy at home, this could be a great option.

Understanding Mirror Therapy for Stroke Recovery

Mirror therapy is a promising stroke rehabilitation method for survivors— especially individuals with hand or arm paralysis. It works by “tricking” the brain into thinking that you’re moving your affected side, even though it is a reflection. This triggers mirror neurons in the brain to fire, which helps improve motor recovery after stroke.

Although mirror therapy exercises can be performed on your own, try working with a therapist to get comfortable first. Then, practice as much as you can at home. Consistency is key to activating neuroplasticity and promoting stroke recovery.

We hope this article helped you understand how mirror therapy for stroke patients can help improve motor function.

The post Mirror Therapy for Stroke Patients: How It Helps with Paralysis Recovery appeared first on Flint Rehab.


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Hemiparesis Living Care, Rehabilitation Recovery, Safety: Includes Care for living with : One Side Partial Paralysis or Muscle Weakness, Footdrop or Spasticity resulting from Head Injury or Stroke
Home Care and Safety, Rehabilitation exercises,associated conditions, problem areas, treatment options, behavioral, emotional consequences, realistic goals, future expectations, resources, brain training and safety practices are covered. Safety and care at home of those affected is the primary focus. This book compiles researching current health care practices emphasizing safety with reviewing valuable lessons learned and studied in over 30 years since the author 'awoke' from a coma, revealing his own partial paralysis or hemiparesis and beginning the road back through rehabilitation and subsequent successful life an an engineer and self growth author