Sunday, January 26, 2014

Therapy Team 2

I learned that stroke survivors are challenged on so many levels. The condition called Aphasia[1], the term for the results of brain damage, is an incredibly cruel master of the body and psyche of its victims. Because of the brain damage, their challenge is monumental. For example, in cases like John’s where the stroke is massive, it is extremely difficult for them to motivate themselves to do therapy of any kind. 

The loss of language from aphasia causes the patient to be unable to put together concepts, make decisions, or anything related to internal or external communication. Internal communication refers to the brain’s inability to communicate within itself in addition to an inability to think clearly. External communication refers to the inability to communicate what thoughts exist to anyone else. 

John lost his ability to rationally look at issues and make decisions. He was merely an observer in the process of life. Initially, he was not able to understand the concept of therapy relative to its potential for him.

In our case, for the first three weeks after the stroke, John was malleable and just did what his speech, occupational and physical therapists told him to do. He didn’t have much choice. He was a captive in a rehab unit. His time was managed by the system. His daily schedule was mapped out for him. His choices came later, when his brain began healing.

After about a month, there was enough healing in his brain to start to clear away some of the aphasia shroud. 



Here’s where I as Caregiver essentially held that life line out to John. I got to encourage him to pick up that life line. Since I knew the value, I insisted that John and I continue as a team, as we had for so many years in the music business. This time we were a Therapy Team instead of a musical team, with the new goal of bringing John back to his former life-skills. Over a longer time he was able to conceptualize that there was some success from the therapy and he began to participate in earnest.

Individual education, personalities, determination, and previous skills become a part of the tool set therapists use to evoke healing, too. The variables for potential outcomes are endless.

I’m extremely grateful we had both been teachers for many years. We knew the value of building skills using a variety of tools. As musicians, we both subscribed to a method of “practice, practice, practice”. These were and are the methods we used then and the methods we still use: tools and practice.



One note of caution here regarding definitions of aphasia and stroke victims: all strokes are different. Damage can occur in one area, or it can be spread around like small meatballs on a plate of spaghetti. It just depends upon the injury itself, and the type of injury. A lot of the initial aphasia is due to the brain swelling immediately after the injury. The brain swells, like any other part of the body when there is injury. Thus the healing of the brain occurs over time as the swelling goes down. As this swelling gradually disappears, many electrical pathways are reconnected.

I was told that most of the brain swelling would be gone at the one month period. The next benchmark is at three months, then six, and then nine months. After approximately two years after the CVA, the swelling is considered gone. Because of this healing process, these same benchmarks exist for the benefits from therapy. This is an incredibly complex process. I am not a neurologist[2] and I ask that you educate yourself on this field of medicine if you desire more information.



Because I knew of the swelling/healing benchmarks, I understood that the greatest benefits from therapy occurred within the benchmark windows. The clock ticks.







 2014 Nancy Weckwerth

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