This document was originally posted on our Omaha website and posted here to our Lincoln visitors.  Thank you and we hope you find this informative

Hypnosis Aids Stroke Recovery

As we age, we just naturally become more vulnerable to disease processes such as high blood pressure, hear disease and stroke. But an interesting case study by two Los Angeles researches sheds doubt on traditional views about the chances for recovery from at least once of these dreaded diseases – stroke.

 

Widely accepted medical viewpoints claim that all recovery from a stroke will stop at about six months after the occurrence of the vascular accident. But using hypnosis, a technique not normally associated with the treatment of stroke, researches helped a 66-year-old woman regain several physical capacities, including limited use of a disables arm and the ability to walk without a cane. The hypnotherapy began six months’ post-stroke and lasted for six months.

 

Under hypnosis, the patient was guided through imagery that recalled memories of previous abilities, including swimming in a river as a child. In addition to the hypnosis sessions, the woman was given audiotapes to practice with at home.

 

Follow-up one-year post-stroke showed verifiable improvement in the physical capabilities of the patient.

 

Researchers Jean Holroyd of the University of California at Los Angeles and Alexis Hill of Permanente Center in Lomita, California speculated that even though therapy for strokes is traditionally viewed as not being useful beyond six months’ post-stroke, the capacity of the mind to learn new information and processes does not have an end point.

 

Imagery works on the mind in a way that is not yet clearly understood. But, as these results show, the ability of imagery to push back traditional limits of effective therapy holds exciting possibilities, and it is an area that merits further investigation.

 

As an interesting side note, the hypnotherapy was instituted at the request of the patient, after a neurologist had concluded that she would not likely gain any further improvement in her physical condition. Sometimes, it seems, the patient knows best.

 

If you or someone you know would like help using guided imagery or visualization to supplement your traditional therapy for stroke or any other condition, you can find names of hypnotherapists in your are who are trained in…

https://www.omahahypnosiscenter.com/hypnosis-aids-stroke-recovery/

See more on hypnosis here https://www.lincolnhypnosiscenter.com