A 62-year-old male patient presents 5 days after a left MCA ischemic stroke.
Clinical findings:
- Right-sided hemiplegia
- Flaccid upper limb
- Poor trunk control
- Unable to sit independently
- Shoulder appears heavy and unsupported
- No active movement in affected arm
- Mild expressive aphasia
The patient is medically stable and referred for physiotherapy.
Clinical Questions to Consider
Before jumping into treatment, ask:
- What are the immediate priorities in early stroke rehab?
- How do we prevent shoulder subluxation?
- How should we position this patient?
- What handling precautions must be followed?
- How do we involve caregivers safely?
Clinical reasoning begins before exercise prescription.
Initial Assessment Priorities
In early stroke rehabilitation, focus on:
- Level of consciousness
- Muscle tone (flaccid vs spastic)
- Trunk stability
- Scapular positioning
- Risk of shoulder subluxation
- Bed mobility ability
- Balance potential
In this case, flaccidity increases risk of shoulder instability.
Positioning Plan (Day 1–3)
Immediate goals:
✔ Prevent shoulder subluxation
✔ Maintain joint alignment
✔ Promote midline orientation
✔ Avoid prolonged asymmetry
Supine Position:
- Pillow under affected arm
- Scapula protracted gently
- Shoulder supported
- Pelvis aligned
Side-Lying (Affected Side):
- Promotes joint approximation
- Encourages sensory awareness
- Proper scapular alignment
Positioning every 2 hours is essential.
Safe Patient Handling Plan
Handling precautions:
- Never pull affected arm
- Support shoulder during transfers
- Avoid lifting under axilla
- Encourage weight shift toward affected side
Therapist must use proper body mechanics and slow facilitation.
Sitting Training (Day 3–5)
Once medically stable:
- Supported sitting at edge of bed
- Trunk facilitation
- Weight-bearing through affected side (gentle)
- Monitor fatigue
Focus: Activate trunk before limb.
Caregiver Education
Teach caregiver:
- Safe turning techniques
- Arm support positioning
- Avoid traction forces
- Proper sitting posture
Early caregiver training prevents complications.
Short-Term Goals (Week 1)
- Maintain shoulder integrity
- Improve sitting tolerance
- Encourage minimal voluntary activation
- Prevent contractures
- Maintain respiratory efficiency
Early rehabilitation is about protection + activation, not aggressive strengthening.
Clinical Takeaway
In early stroke rehabilitation, patient handling and positioning are as important as exercise therapy.
A structured approach in the first week prevents long-term complications and improves recovery trajectory.