Stroke fitness llc (7 resultados)

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Librería: California Books, Miami, FL, Estados Unidos de AmericaCalifornia Books
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EUR 44,12
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Librería: PBShop.store UK, Fairford, GLOS, Reino UnidoPBShop.store UK
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EUR 40,72
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HRD. Condición: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000.

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Librería: Grand Eagle Retail, Bensenville, IL, Estados Unidos de AmericaGrand Eagle Retail
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EUR 44,11
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Hardcover. Condición: new. Hardcover. Every year, fifteen million people survive a stroke. Most walk away from rehabilitation technically improved - but fundamentally incomplete. The fatigue persists. The sharpness is missing. The coordination never fully returns. For decades, clinicians and survivors alike have attributed this…plateau to the natural limits of neurological recovery. What if the plateau is not the limit of the nervous system - but the limit of the programme? In Unfinished Recovery, Dr. Jan Arjen Kuipers - a Clinical Neuroscientist and Post-Stroke Program Director with three decades of clinical practice and peer-reviewed research - presents the clinical argument that has been missing from stroke recovery for fifty years. Co-authored with Linda Radestad, a stroke survivor, co-inventor of proprietary rehabilitation equipment, and co-creator of the framework the book describes, Unfinished Recovery advances a paradigm shift: that post-stroke rehabilitation ends too early not because the nervous system has reached its ceiling, but because standard protocols were never designed to engage the three neural layers whose reorganisation determines full recovery. The book presents the three-layer framework in its clinical completeness: Layer One, the brainstem and spinal foundation; Layer Two, the vestibular and sensory integration systems; Layer Three, the cortical and cognitive synchronisation networks. Worked together in parallel - not sequentially - with proportional weighting that shifts across the arc of recovery, these three layers constitute what the authors call directed neuroplasticity: a scientifically grounded, clinically proven approach that reopens the window of recovery at any phase, from acute to chronic. Drawing on developmental neuroscience, clinical motor-control research, and twenty years of case experience, Unfinished Recovery explains why the plateau is not biology but programme design; what the existing evidence actually supports; and what becomes possible when the right inputs are delivered to the right circuits at the right scale. For the stroke survivor who knows something remains possible - and for the clinician who needs a framework to deliver it. Most stroke survivors leave rehabilitation technically improved but fundamentally incomplete. Dr. Jan Arjen Kuipers argues that the post-rehabilitation plateau is not the limit of the nervous system - it is the limit of the programme. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability.

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Librería: CitiRetail, Stevenage, Reino UnidoCitiRetail
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EUR 45,40
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Hardcover. Condición: new. Hardcover. Every year, fifteen million people survive a stroke. Most walk away from rehabilitation technically improved - but fundamentally incomplete. The fatigue persists. The sharpness is missing. The coordination never fully returns. For decades, clinicians and survivors alike have attributed this…plateau to the natural limits of neurological recovery. What if the plateau is not the limit of the nervous system - but the limit of the programme? In Unfinished Recovery, Dr. Jan Arjen Kuipers - a Clinical Neuroscientist and Post-Stroke Program Director with three decades of clinical practice and peer-reviewed research - presents the clinical argument that has been missing from stroke recovery for fifty years. Co-authored with Linda Radestad, a stroke survivor, co-inventor of proprietary rehabilitation equipment, and co-creator of the framework the book describes, Unfinished Recovery advances a paradigm shift: that post-stroke rehabilitation ends too early not because the nervous system has reached its ceiling, but because standard protocols were never designed to engage the three neural layers whose reorganisation determines full recovery. The book presents the three-layer framework in its clinical completeness: Layer One, the brainstem and spinal foundation; Layer Two, the vestibular and sensory integration systems; Layer Three, the cortical and cognitive synchronisation networks. Worked together in parallel - not sequentially - with proportional weighting that shifts across the arc of recovery, these three layers constitute what the authors call directed neuroplasticity: a scientifically grounded, clinically proven approach that reopens the window of recovery at any phase, from acute to chronic. Drawing on developmental neuroscience, clinical motor-control research, and twenty years of case experience, Unfinished Recovery explains why the plateau is not biology but programme design; what the existing evidence actually supports; and what becomes possible when the right inputs are delivered to the right circuits at the right scale. For the stroke survivor who knows something remains possible - and for the clinician who needs a framework to deliver it. Most stroke survivors leave rehabilitation technically improved but fundamentally incomplete. Dr. Jan Arjen Kuipers argues that the post-rehabilitation plateau is not the limit of the nervous system - it is the limit of the programme. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability.

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Librería: AussieBookSeller, Truganina, VIC, AustraliaAussieBookSeller
Contactar con el vendedorVendedor de 5 estrellasCondición: Nuevo
EUR 64,72
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Hardcover. Condición: new. Hardcover. Every year, fifteen million people survive a stroke. Most walk away from rehabilitation technically improved - but fundamentally incomplete. The fatigue persists. The sharpness is missing. The coordination never fully returns. For decades, clinicians and survivors alike have attributed this…plateau to the natural limits of neurological recovery. What if the plateau is not the limit of the nervous system - but the limit of the programme? In Unfinished Recovery, Dr. Jan Arjen Kuipers - a Clinical Neuroscientist and Post-Stroke Program Director with three decades of clinical practice and peer-reviewed research - presents the clinical argument that has been missing from stroke recovery for fifty years. Co-authored with Linda Radestad, a stroke survivor, co-inventor of proprietary rehabilitation equipment, and co-creator of the framework the book describes, Unfinished Recovery advances a paradigm shift: that post-stroke rehabilitation ends too early not because the nervous system has reached its ceiling, but because standard protocols were never designed to engage the three neural layers whose reorganisation determines full recovery. The book presents the three-layer framework in its clinical completeness: Layer One, the brainstem and spinal foundation; Layer Two, the vestibular and sensory integration systems; Layer Three, the cortical and cognitive synchronisation networks. Worked together in parallel - not sequentially - with proportional weighting that shifts across the arc of recovery, these three layers constitute what the authors call directed neuroplasticity: a scientifically grounded, clinically proven approach that reopens the window of recovery at any phase, from acute to chronic. Drawing on developmental neuroscience, clinical motor-control research, and twenty years of case experience, Unfinished Recovery explains why the plateau is not biology but programme design; what the existing evidence actually supports; and what becomes possible when the right inputs are delivered to the right circuits at the right scale. For the stroke survivor who knows something remains possible - and for the clinician who needs a framework to deliver it. Most stroke survivors leave rehabilitation technically improved but fundamentally incomplete. Dr. Jan Arjen Kuipers argues that the post-rehabilitation plateau is not the limit of the nervous system - it is the limit of the programme. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability.

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Librería: preigu, Osnabrück, Alemaniapreigu
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EUR 51,65
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Buch. Condición: Neu. Unfinished Recovery | From Crawling to Connected: The Three-Layer Evolutionary Framework That Completes Stroke Rehabilitation | Jan Arjen Kuipers (u. a.) | Buch | Englisch | 2026 | Stroke.Fitness LLC | EAN 9798995738800 | Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Libri GmbH, Europaallee 1, 36244 Bad Hersfeld, gpsr…[at]libri[dot]de | Anbieter: preigu Print on Demand.

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Librería: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, AlemaniaAHA-BUCH GmbH
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EUR 62,00
Envío por EUR 63,77Se envía de Alemania a Estados Unidos de AmericaCantidad disponible: 2 disponibles
Buch. Condición: Neu. nach der Bestellung gedruckt Neuware - Printed after ordering - Every year, fifteen million people survive a stroke. Most walk away from rehabilitation technically improved - but fundamentally incomplete. The fatigue persists. The sharpness is missing. The coordination never fully returns. For decades, clin…icians and survivors alike have attributed this plateau to the natural limits of neurological recovery. What if the plateau is not the limit of the nervous system - but the limit of the programme In Unfinished Recovery, Dr. Jan Arjen Kuipers - a Clinical Neuroscientist and Post-Stroke Program Director with three decades of clinical practice and peer-reviewed research - presents the clinical argument that has been missing from stroke recovery for fifty years. Co-authored with Linda Rådestad, a stroke survivor, co-inventor of proprietary rehabilitation equipment, and co-creator of the framework the book describes, Unfinished Recovery advances a paradigm shift: that post-stroke rehabilitation ends too early not because the nervous system has reached its ceiling, but because standard protocols were never designed to engage the three neural layers whose reorganisation determines full recovery. The book presents the three-layer framework in its clinical completeness: Layer One, the brainstem and spinal foundation; Layer Two, the vestibular and sensory integration systems; Layer Three, the cortical and cognitive synchronisation networks. Worked together in parallel - not sequentially - with proportional weighting that shifts across the arc of recovery, these three layers constitute what the authors call directed neuroplasticity: a scientifically grounded, clinically proven approach that reopens the window of recovery at any phase, from acute to chronic. Drawing on developmental neuroscience, clinical motor-control research, and twenty years of case experience, Unfinished Recovery explains why the plateau is not biology but programme design; what the existing evidence actually supports; and what becomes possible when the right inputs are delivered to the right circuits at the right scale. For the stroke survivor who knows something remains possible - and for the clinician who needs a framework to deliver it.