Lecture 4 - Clinical Practice 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Some spontaneous recovery is possible within patients with brain damage, when does this usually occur and on what is the extend of recovery dependent?

A

It depends on the severity, location and type of injury and happens usually within 12-14 weeks after the injury

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2
Q

For the large majority of cases, is full recovery possible? Substantiate your answer

A

No, for most people functioning will never return to what they were used to before the trauma and are left with permanent neuropsychological disorders

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3
Q

In which time frame does most of the recovery happen?

A

3-6 months

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4
Q

Explain what neuroplasticity is and which two ways of it there are

A

The ability for the brain to modify itself
(functionally or structurally) in response to injury (spontaneous) or in response to stimulation and treatment (experience-dependent)

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5
Q

Does neuroplasticity happen only after injury? Substantiate

A

No, it happens throughout life because of development and learning

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6
Q

Neuroplasticity can happen functionally or structurally, what is the difference?

A

Functional = the function of one damaged area of the brain moves to a non-affected area

Structural = physical changes in the brain happen because of experiences

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7
Q

Spontaneous recovery can happen in two ways (within the brain), which two ways?

A

Diffuse and redundant connectivity - Recovery takes place by activating other areas in the network

Cortical reorganization - new structural and functional connections between cortical areas take over

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8
Q

The lecture mentions some “rules” to increase neuroplasticity, which are they and what do they mean?

A
  1. use it or lose it (aka stimulate the damaged brain area)
  2. Salience (important experiences = better processing)
  3. Repetition, intensity and time
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9
Q

The Kennard Principle is an outdated principle regarding brain plasticity, why do we no longer support this principle?

A

It is clear now that children don’t necessarily recover better/quicker from brain trauma, but certain cognitive skills that are affected by the injury were not yet learned by the child and thus deficit in this area did not show > growing into deficit

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10
Q

Restorative approach is one of the kinds of training used in rehabilitation, what method does this approach use?

A

Functional training; cognitive functions will recover through repeated exercise

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11
Q

There is a concept called “near and far transfer” + generalization, explain

A

Near transfer = to same/vert similar task only

Far transfer = to different tasks/context/domains

Generalization = Learned behaviour is applied to daily life

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12
Q

Does the restorative approach work? Substantiate :)

A

Not that we know, repeated training does not restore cognitive functions and thus solely focusing on the functions/structures part of the ICF model (impairments) does not seem to lead to improvement on activity/participation level

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13
Q

Another approach to rehabilitation is the compensatory approach, explainnn

A

Focuses on the activity/participation levels of the ICF model. This is about learning strategies to compensate for impairments

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14
Q

Name and explain the different types of compensatory approach methods

A
  • Environmental adaptations (making the environment work for you!)
  • Stimulus-response conditioning
  • Skill training (task level through repetition, not aimed at improving cognitive functions or generalization)
  • Strategy training (generalization goal)
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15
Q

Gross and Schutz (1986) have a model regarding different types of compensatory approaches- what is this model and what four “benchmarks” are there?

A

Which different methods within this approach need what type of cognitive functioning (which are; Learning, generalization, self-monitoring and goal setting).

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16
Q

Link the four methods of the compensatory approach which cognitive abilities are needed

Gross and Schutz (1986) model

A

Environmental control - nothing

S-R conditioning - Learning

Skill training - Learning and generalization

Strategy training - above + self-monitoring