Clinical and Linguistic Correlates of Functional Communication Abilities After Stroke: A Longitudinal Study
Pasquale Moretta, Laura Marcuccio, Nicola Davide Cavallo, Roberta Galetta, Rosanna Falcone, Vittorio Masiello, Gerardo Cavaliere, Carlo Miccio, Emilia Picciola, Ernesto Losavio, Simona Spaccavento

TL;DR
This study finds that recovery of communication after stroke is more strongly linked to initial comprehension skills and daily living abilities than to age or stroke type.
Contribution
The study identifies comprehension skills and functional autonomy as key predictors of communication recovery in post-stroke aphasia.
Findings
Patients showed significant improvements in language domains and functional independence after rehabilitation.
Comprehension skills (Token test and BEL-II) and ADL scores were strong predictors of communication recovery.
Demographic and general clinical variables like age or stroke etiology did not predict communication recovery.
Abstract
Background: Aphasia, a common consequence of left-hemisphere stroke, significantly impairs communication and daily functioning. Various studies have explored language recovery but only few have focused on the predictors of recovery of functional communication in patients with stroke. Objective: To identify clinical and linguistic factors associated with functional communication outcomes in patients with post-stroke aphasia. Methods: We enrolled 61 patients with aphasia due to left-hemispheric stroke, admitted to post-acute neurorehabilitation centers. Patients underwent neuropsychological, functional, and language assessments at admission (T0) and discharge (T1). Language abilities were evaluated with the Brief Exam of Language—II (BEL-II), and functional communication was measured through caregiver-rated I-CETI scores. Depression, basic (ADL) and instrumental (IADL) activities of daily…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStroke Rehabilitation and Recovery · Neurobiology of Language and Bilingualism
