Therapeutic Technology
Our hospital provides such leading-edge technology – as well as therapists trained to use it best – to ensure our patients are positioned to recover as quickly as possible.
Innovative Solutions for Superior Outcomes
New technology continues to push the boundaries of what once was considered full recovery from certain injuries or conditions. Today, for instance, top inpatient rehabilitation facilities deploy robotic tools that give stroke patients the ability to use their upper extremities again or help spinal cord injury patients with early ambulation.
Our hospital provides such leading-edge technology – as well as therapists trained to use it best – to ensure our patients are positioned to recover as quickly as possible.
Here are some examples of some of the industry’s best technology deployed at our hospital:
TecnoBody® Isofree
The TecnoBody® Isofree system was designed to treat anyone looking to improve balance, stability, and functional mobility. It addresses a wide variety of pathologies and is a good tool to use in conjunction with traditional therapeutic interventions. TecnoBody Isofree allows for enhancing kinesthetic and proprioceptive awareness during functional tasks as well as working on improving reflex mechanisms that play a role in maintaining balance and decreasing the risk of falls. All of this is facilitated via biofeedback that is provided throughout the activity by the interconnected sensor platform and 3D camera.
Smart Car
Our Smart Car is fully integrated into our rehab gym, allowing our patients to learn and practice car transfer skills year-round at any time during a treatment session. Car transfer training activities are essential to prepare our patients for community reintegration and setting them up for success when getting back to their daily activities.
LiteGait®
LiteGait® is a body-weight support system and gait training device that provides a safe environment for patients to participate in gait training over a treadmill or over the ground. This system allows patients to begin gait training earlier in the rehabilitation process and at a lower level than would be feasible with any other assistive device available. The LiteGait system eliminates the fear of falling and/or loss of balance with standing and walking tasks and allows the therapist the ability to provide manual assistance to the legs and pelvis throughout the gait cycle to facilitate proper gait patterns.
Overhead Body Weight Support System
Our overhead body weight support system provides dynamic body weight support while patients practice walking, balance tasks, sit-to-stand transfers, open and closed-chain strengthening exercises, and even steps. This system is mounted to an overhead track, allowing for use within the parallel bars or outside of the bars when introducing an assistive device during gait training progression. The body weight support system provides a safe environment for patients to begin standing, transfer, and gait training.
SaeboMAS
The SaeboMAS is a zero-gravity upper extremity device used to facilitate or challenge the weakened shoulder during functional tasks, such as eating or combing your hair. This device is used with patients with neurological and orthopedic conditions resulting in shoulder weakness. The adjustable spring-based tension system offers variable levels of assistance as the patient’s strength improves and makes it easy to track and document progress. It can be used to increase strength, range of motion, and motor control and encourage neuroplasticity by allowing the opportunity for highly repetitive tasks.
InMotion
The BIONIK InMotionARM™ Robot is often used with many patients who suffer from weakness in their upper extremities after a stroke. The ARM Robot helps patients utilize their strength to complete hundreds of repetitions in a fraction of the time of traditional exercise. Repetition is one of the most important factors when considering neuroplasticity and the brain’s ability to repair and relearn movements following a stroke. This evidence-based neurorehabilitation technology quietly monitors the patient’s movements during therapy while gently assisting where needed to help them complete various motor therapy activities.
EksoGTTM
The EksoGT™ exoskeletal unit assists patients with early ambulation following a stroke or spinal cord injury. Ekso is a robotic exoskeleton that can be fitted to most patients to allow them to stand and ambulate early in the rehab process, which is key to their long-term prognosis. Clinical evidence indicates that gait training in the Ekso improves patients’ balance, walking distance, and gait speed outside of the device at discharge compared to admission.
RehabTracker
RehabTracker is a groundbreaking person-centered mobile app that is transforming how our partners engage with patients and their families. Combined with our approach of focusing our care around What Matters to You (the patient), RehabTracker allows patients and their invited loved ones to view their personalized goals, see and track their patient progress in real-time as logged by our therapists, including overall progress toward discharge goals, activities of daily living, distance and transfers, share that progress with invited family and friends, share patient photos during their recovery journey, receive comments from staff and messages of support from loved ones – all from the palm of their hands. Areas of patient progress include self-care activities such as bathing, dressing, and eating, mobility activities including walking, transfers, and bed mobility, speech-language activities including expression and comprehension, memory and problem-solving, and diet/swallowing food and liquid consistencies. Facilities utilizing RehabTracker have experienced greater levels of patient motivation as well as patient and family member engagement and satisfaction.
VitalStim® Therapy
Dysphagia is defined as difficulty with swallowing. It can occur as a result of a stroke or other neurological disease, normal aging or after a long period of inactivity. An estimated 15 million adults in the US currently suffer from dysphagia.
In the last few years, new treatment options have become available – especially the use of electrical stimulation. This exciting treatment tool, VitalStim® Therapy, is showing good outcomes in most patients with relatively few treatments. It is simple for certified clinicians to administer and is pain-free for the patient.
Who is a Typical Patient?
Typical patent categories include, but are not limited to:
- Those who experienced a stroke
- De-conditioning as a result of age or co-morbidity
- Head and neck cancer (post-radiation) and/or surgery
- Various neuromuscular disease processes (e.g., Parkinson’s, ALS, etc.)
Am I a Candidate for VitalStim Therapy?
If you show signs of aspiration or have difficulty managing your diet, you may be a candidate for dysphagia therapy. Look for one or more of the following signs and symptoms:
- Coughing/clearing throat after swallowing
- Decreased voice quality (wet, hoarse, weak)
- Multiple swallows or special maneuvers required to clear throat
- A feeling of food being stuck in the throat
- Difficulty initiating a swallow
- Abnormal volitional cough
- Recurring chest infections
- Difficulty completing a meal
- Modified diet required (thickening, pureeing food; soft solids)
- Spilling food or liquid from lips and/or drooling
LSVT® BIG and LOUD Therapy
Now providing treatment for Parkinson’s disease and other neurological conditions.
Lee Silverman Voice Treatment (LSVT®) Big and Loud Therapy to empower those living with Parkinson's disease to move and speak better. Declining vocal strength, muffled speech and difficulty swallowing create problems with communication and eating. Patients also often experience tremors, slow movement, impaired balance and stiffness. But there is good news – studies have proven patients with Parkinson's disease at any stage can benefit from intensive rehabilitation.
- LSVT® can help people with other conditions such as stroke, multiple sclerosis, multiple systems atrophy, cerebral palsy.
- LSVT® Big and Loud is especially effective soon after the disease is diagnosed.
SPEAK LOUD – MOVE BIG: LSVT® is an effective treatment program that's proven to help individuals living with Parkinson's disease, giving them new hope for improved communication and movement for work, family and social activities. The method was developed following rigorous research funded by the National Institutes of Health.
LSVT BIG™: Physical therapists or occupational therapists use LSVT Big to address the unique movement impairments for people with Parkinson's disease. Therapists work with individuals to improve major motor skills, like walking, arm and leg movement, balance, and hand skills such as writing.
LSVT LOUD™: Speech-language pathologists improve vocal loudness by stimulating the muscles of the voice box (larynx) and speech mechanism through a series of loud exercises. Therapy does not train people to shout or yell – rather it trains a healthy louder voice with no strain.
Bioness® L300 Foot Drop System
The Bioness® L300 is the first FES Foot Drop System, which is low profile, wireless, and easy to use.
The L300 may help patients regain function for foot drop associated with:
- Stroke
- Traumatic Brain Injury
- Multiple Sclerosis
- Cerebral Palsy
- Incomplete Spinal Cord Injury
Beyond producing a more normal gait, the Bioness L300 may help:
- Reeducate muscles to function without the system
- Prevent or retard muscle atrophy
- Maintain or increase joint range or motion
- Increase local blood flow
A recent clinical study showed that the Bioness L300 offers significant improvements when compared to walking without it! An 8-week study of 15 patients who used an AFO showed that the L300 significantly improved stride time compared to an AFO and 100% of the patients in this study preferred the L300 to their AFO.
Wii-habilitation
The use of the Nintendo Wii in rehabilitation provides the patient with the benefits of increased enjoyment and compliance with treatment. At the same time, therapists are able to choose specific games and activities to strengthen targeted muscle groups, challenge the patient’s cognition, improve coordination, and increase the patient’s endurance/activity tolerance. The Wii is a very useful therapy tool that is a “fun” addition to the treatment program.
Low Stimulation Gym
Patients who have experienced a stroke or brain injury can sometimes become overwhelmed in noisy, bright, or busy environments. This “over-stimulation” can negatively affect the patient’s ability to participate in the therapy program and slow recovery. Our rehabilitation facility offers a separate low-stimulation therapy gym for these patients to provide the optimal healing experience.