Scientists at EPFL have developed an innovative, non-invasive brain stimulation therapy to significantly improve visual function in stroke patients who have suffered vision loss following a stroke.
Imagine your brain as a bustling city with millions of interconnected highways carrying information at lightning speed. Now picture what happens when a major earthquake hits, destroying some of those ...
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Detecting hidden sensory losses

In findings recently published in Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair, Semrau and doctoral candidate Joanna Hoh suggest ...
Georgetown University Medical Center (GUMC) faculty published a study on Sept. 8 that deepened scientists’ understanding of the brain’s role in language recovery for stroke patients. Dr. Peter ...
Leading rehabilitation specialists share breakthrough techniques that help stroke survivors regain independence, with remarkable success stories of recovery When Sarah Thompson woke up one morning ...
Intracranial atherosclerotic disease, a leading cause of stroke caused by plaque buildup that reduces blood flow in the brain ...
"You need a posse, you need persistence and you need prayer." Vivian King was 49 years old when she suffered a massive stroke. "I was in neurological ICU for 10 days and the hospital for a total of 32 ...
After years of traditional physiotherapy and speech therapy, Foster – who can now walk and talk again – said he began making ...
Scientists at EPFL have developed an innovative, non-invasive brain stimulation therapy to significantly improve visual ...