Breaking the learned helplessness paradigm in chronic stroke: an intensive neuroplasticity framework bridging European technology and African innovation

打破慢性中风习得性无助的范式:连接欧洲技术和非洲创新的强化神经可塑性框架

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Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Most chronic stroke survivors develop learned helplessness regarding motor recovery prospects, accepting permanent disability despite evidence that neuroplasticity windows remain accessible years post-stroke. This review examines how intensive protocols targeting learned helplessness can achieve meaningful recovery across diverse healthcare settings. METHODS: Comprehensive literature review using PubMed, Scopus, and specialized databases (1990-2024). Analysis included constraint-induced movement therapy protocols, progressive muscle lengthening techniques, and neuroplasticity principles across European high-technology centers and African human-intensive programs. Search incorporated systematic analysis of therapeutic intensity parameters, cultural adaptation protocols, and cross-continental implementation strategies. RESULTS: Literature synthesis reveals meaningful functional recovery 2-5 years post-stroke when intensive protocols directly challenge learned helplessness through forced-use approaches, training intensities exceeding traditional therapy doses (3-6 h daily versus 30-45 min), and systematic addressing of secondary muscle adaptations. Cross-continental validation demonstrates equivalent outcomes between European technology-dependent and African human-intensive approaches when therapeutic intensity and neuroplasticity targeting remain consistent. CONCLUSION: Neuroplasticity-driven intensive rehabilitation can overcome learned helplessness and achieve meaningful motor recovery years after stroke without requiring expensive technology. Success depends on abandoning traditional recovery timelines, implementing culturally-adapted intensive protocols, and recognizing human expertise as the most powerful rehabilitation tool when properly applied.

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