# From learned helplessness to motor recovery: integrating intensive neurorehabilitation in poststroke spastic paresis—clinical insights from over 10 years of practice

**Authors:** Ibrahim Npochinto Moumeni

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fresc.2025.1644723 · Frontiers in Rehabilitation Sciences · 2026-01-30

## TL;DR

A new rehabilitation approach for post-stroke spastic paresis improves recovery by combining intensive training and muscle stretching, working well in both high-tech and low-resource settings.

## Contribution

An integrated neurorehabilitation approach combining constraint-induced movement therapy and muscle-lengthening protocols is shown to improve long-term outcomes in poststroke spastic paresis.

## Key findings

- Integrated rehabilitation combining movement therapy and muscle stretching outperforms conventional methods.
- Functional improvements were observed even years after stroke onset.
- The approach is effective across diverse cultural and resource settings.

## Abstract

Poststroke spastic paresis represents a dual pathology combining neurological impairment and secondary muscle contracture, often perpetuated by learned non-use. Current rehabilitation approaches frequently address these components separately, limiting functional recovery potential.

This perspective synthesizes over 10 years of clinical experience treating poststroke spastic paresis across European and sub-Saharan African settings, integrating constraint-induced movement therapy with progressive muscle-lengthening protocols. Clinical insights are drawn from over 300 patients treated in both resource-rich and resource-limited environments.

The integrated approach demonstrates superior outcomes compared with conventional therapy, with patients showing functional improvements even years after stroke. Key success factors include intensive training protocols, systematic antagonist muscle stretching, and patient-centered motivation strategies adapted to diverse cultural contexts. European validation and African implementation confirm universal applicability.

Combining neuroplasticity-based interventions with muscle-targeted therapies offers a paradigm shift in poststroke rehabilitation. This approach proves effective across diverse healthcare settings, from high-technology European centers to resource-limited African hospitals, relying on intensive human intervention and evidence-based protocols.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** stroke (MESH:D020521), muscle contracture (MESH:D003286), neurological impairment (MESH:D009422), spastic paresis (MESH:D010291)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

20 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12901396/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12901396