荔枝视频

Oct. 30, 2024

Neuroscience researcher turns spotlight on gaps in stroke rehabilitation

Killam Postdoctoral Scholar focuses on rehabilitating visual impairments caused by strokes
A woman sits in an optometrist chair
Postdoc Isabelle Poitras, left, will use robotic equipment to assess how a patient鈥檚 eye and motor movements relate to one another. Riley Brandt, 荔枝视频

In the days following a stroke, more than 60 per cent of patients suffer from vision problems. These impairments can manifest in many ways, but all are detrimental to overall stroke recovery and quality of life. While common, post-stroke vision problems and their connection to motor impairments are vastly under-studied.

For Dr. Isabelle Poitras, PhD, this area of stroke rehabilitation is where she hopes to make an impact. 鈥淗elping people is my main goal. It has been since I started my training, and it stays my main goal,鈥 she says. Poitras, a postdoc in the Department of Clinical Neuroscience at the (CSM), has been awarded a to research better assessment and treatment of post-stroke visual problems.

The two types of visual problems that Poitras will be researching are visual field loss and visual neglect. Visual field loss is the experience of patients no longer being able to see in certain parts of their field of vision, creating a "blind spot." Visual neglect is when patients aren鈥檛 able to pay attention to part of their field of vision, often one side of their body or the other. In both cases, patients鈥 eyes are functioning normally, but the brain can鈥檛 process what the eyes are seeing.

If a patient鈥檚 brain can鈥檛 process what they see, patients aren鈥檛 able to interact with their environment using their limbs. In typical stroke rehabilitation, clinicians will prioritize treating motor impairments, without having a full understanding of how a patients鈥 visual impairments are affecting their motor skills.

If these problems persist, they can make it extremely challenging for patients to return to daily life. 鈥淎fter a stroke, more than a quarter of patients will have visual neglect, and approximately half will have visual field loss,鈥 says Poitras. 鈥淎pproximately half of them will regain full vision, but the other half will still have deficits after six months. They will have trouble doing activities of daily living like cooking or dressing themselves. If they are young, they may not return to work.鈥

A woman with long brown hair

Isabelle Poitras

Developing new assessment and treatment protocols

Poitras鈥 goal is to enhance our understanding of the impact of visual problems on stroke survivors, so that they can be assessed and treated more effectively. First, she will be using specialized robotic equipment that can assess how a patient鈥檚 eye movement and motor movements relate to one another.

Patients sit with their arms supported by a robotic exoskeleton, while looking at a screen that is showing a game that requires patients to use their eye-hand co-ordination. Their eye and arm movements are being tracked at the same time, allowing Poitras to assess how a patients visual and motor impairments are related.

鈥淰isual impairments are typically not systematically assessed post-stroke, and we don't have a lot of information on them,鈥 Poitras says. By following this assessment protocol, Poitras will establish a comprehensive database on visual impairments and abnormalities in eye movements during the stroke recovery process.

The second phase of Poitras鈥 research is to test an intervention using non-invasive brain stimulation, combined with visual rehabilitation. Brain stimulation (called repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation, or rTMS) is delivered via a large magnet, called a 鈥渃oil,鈥 that patients sit under as it stimulates a specific area of the brain. After 20 minutes under the magnet, patients will do motor or visual therapy activities.

When you stimulate a part of the brain, it鈥檚 possible for the brain to reorganize information more than just with therapy by itself,鈥 Poitras says. 鈥淚f you do rTMS alone, not a lot of results will come from that. But, for example, if you gain 20-per cent improvement from just doing the therapy alone, you can gain 30-35 per cent with the rTMS.鈥

A computer screen with graphics of a scan

Making a difference, thanks to the Killam Postdoctoral Fellowship

For Poitras, the goals of her research are tied to her previous training as an occupational therapist. When working in clinics, she often saw patients who didn鈥檛 have adequate services or treatments available to help them rehabilitate. 鈥淚鈥檓 really interested in undertreated conditions,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 seeing what patients need and trying to make the best project so that they can have services in the future.鈥

Poitras moved to 荔枝视频 from Quebec City only recently, joining  at CSM. Dukelow, MD, PhD, is a professor in the Department of Clinical Neuroscience and medical director of stroke rehabilitation for the . After an internship in Dukelow鈥檚 lab in 2022, Poitras was impressed and inspired by the stroke-treatment research underway at U荔枝视频 and wanted to come back.

鈥淭he Killam Fellowship allows me to be here and do research that I鈥檓 passionate about, and give back to my community,鈥 says Poitras. 鈥淚t means that I can come here and make a difference.鈥


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