Stroke Rehabilitation Guide: Recovery Timeline, Exercises & Physiotherapy | PhysiotherapistIndia.com
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🧠 Clinical Guide · Updated March 2026

Stroke Rehabilitation
A Complete Guide to Recovery

An evidence-based roadmap for stroke recovery β€” from the intensive care unit to returning home. Written by Dr. Dharam Pandey, integrating 25+ years of neurorehabilitation experience and the F-MATS framework.

⏱️ 14 min read πŸ‘¨β€βš•οΈ Dr. Dharam Pandey, PhD πŸ“‹ Peer-reviewed
Recovery at a Glance
Acute Phase
24-72 hours: Early mobilisation, positioning, complication prevention
Subacute Phase
1 week - 3 months: Intensive rehabilitation, neuroplasticity window
Chronic Phase
3+ months: Community reintegration, adaptive strategies
NEUROPLASTICITY PEAK
First 3 months
RECOVERY POTENTIAL
85%+
1.5M+Stroke survivors in India
70%Regain walking ability
40%Need arm rehabilitation
3-6 moCritical recovery window

What Happens During a Stroke?

A stroke occurs when blood supply to part of the brain is interrupted or reduced, depriving brain tissue of oxygen and nutrients. Within minutes, brain cells begin to die.

🩸
Ischemic
87% of cases
πŸ’₯
Hemorrhagic
13% of cases

Ischemic strokes are caused by clots; hemorrhagic by bleeding in the brain. Rehabilitation principles apply to both, though timeline and precautions differ.

Common Deficits After Stroke

Hemiparesis
Weakness on one side
Spatial neglect
Ignoring affected side
Aphasia
Speech/language difficulty
Dysphagia
Swallowing difficulty
🧠 Brain Plasticity After Stroke

The brain can reorganise itself by forming new neural connections throughout life. After a stroke, undamaged areas can take over functions from damaged areas β€” but this requires specific, intensive training.

Neuroplasticity principles:
  • Use it or lose it
  • Specificity matters
  • Repetition is essential
  • Intensity drives change
  • Timing matters (early window)
"Neurons that fire together, wire together."
β€” Hebbian theory

The Three Phases of Stroke Rehabilitation

Recovery follows a predictable trajectory. Understanding each phase helps set realistic goals and prepare for what comes next.

01
Acute Phase
Days 1-7
  • Early mobilisation (as soon as medically stable)
  • Positioning to prevent contractures
  • Passive range of motion exercises
  • Respiratory care and aspiration prevention
  • Family education and training
πŸ“ Setting: Hospital / ICU
02
Subacute Phase
Week 2 - Month 3
  • Intensive task-specific training (β‰₯3 hours/day)
  • Constraint-induced movement therapy
  • Gait retraining with body-weight support
  • Activities of daily living (ADL) training
  • Peak neuroplasticity window
πŸ“ Setting: Inpatient rehab / Day care
03
Chronic Phase
3+ Months
  • Community reintegration
  • Adaptive equipment training
  • Home modification assessments
  • Maintenance exercise programmes
  • Secondary prevention (falls, recurrence)
πŸ“ Setting: Outpatient / Home-based
πŸ‘¨β€βš•οΈ Dr. Pandey's Clinical Note

"The first three months post-stroke represent the period of greatest neuroplasticity. Intensive, task-specific therapy during this window yields the strongest functional gains. However, recovery continues for years β€” we never stop seeing progress in motivated patients."

The F-MATS Framework for Neurorehabilitation

Developed by Dr. Dharam Pandey, F-MATS (Functional Movement and Task-Specific Training) integrates motor learning principles with neuroplasticity science.

F
Functional
Training focuses on meaningful, real-world tasks β€” not isolated movements.
M
Movement
Quality of movement matters β€” we retrain normal patterns, not compensations.
A
Adaptive
Treatment adapts to the patient's changing abilities and goals.
T
Task-Specific
Practice the actual task you want to improve β€” walking, reaching, standing.
S
Structured
Progressive, measurable, and evidence-based protocols.
Learn more about F-MATS β†’
πŸ“Š F-MATS Outcomes
Walking
78%
Arm function
65%
ADL independence
82%

Based on 347 patients treated with F-MATS protocol (2020-2025)

Essential Exercises for Stroke Recovery

Always perform these under physiotherapist supervision. Exercises should be progressed based on the patient's stage and abilities.

🀲
Passive Range of Motion
Acute Phase
Gentle movement of shoulder, elbow, wrist, hip, knee, ankle by therapist/caregiver to prevent stiffness.
πŸ”„
Weight Shifting in Sitting
Subacute Phase
Sit with feet flat, shift weight onto affected side to improve postural control and prepare for standing.
🦡
Bridging
Subacute Phase
Lying on back, knees bent, lift hips to strengthen glutes and core β€” essential for walking preparation.
βœ‹
Reaching Tasks
Subacute/Chronic
Place objects at varying distances to encourage affected arm reaching and weight bearing.
🚢
Sit-to-Stand Practice
Subacute Phase
Repeated practice of standing up from chair β€” key functional task for independence.
πŸ‘£
Weight Bearing on Affected Leg
Subacute/Chronic
Standing with equal weight on both legs, progressing to single-leg stance.
⚠️ Important Safety Considerations
  • Never pull on the affected arm β€” risk of shoulder subluxation
  • Monitor blood pressure during exercises
  • Stop if patient reports dizziness, chest pain, or severe fatigue
  • Ensure proper support and positioning

Positioning & Handling in Bed

Proper positioning prevents complications: shoulder pain, contractures, pressure sores, and respiratory issues.

Lying on Affected Side

  • Affected shoulder forward, arm supported
  • Both legs bent, pillow between knees
  • Head in neutral position

Lying on Unaffected Side

  • Affected arm supported on pillow
  • Affected leg forward, supported by pillow
  • Prevents shoulder retraction

Supine (Back Lying)

  • Small pillow under head only
  • Affected arm supported on pillow
  • Rolled towel under affected hip to prevent external rotation
πŸ›οΈ Positioning Visual Guide
πŸ”„
Change position every 2 hours
Prevents pressure ulcers
🦾
Never pull the affected arm
Support shoulder during transfers
πŸ“
Keep affected arm visible
Prevents neglect and promotes awareness

Preventing Secondary Complications

Stroke survivors are at risk for several preventable complications. Early recognition and intervention are critical.

🫁

Pneumonia

Aspiration pneumonia is a leading cause of death post-stroke.

  • Swallow assessment before oral intake
  • Upright positioning during meals
  • Chest physiotherapy if needed
🩸

DVT

Deep vein thrombosis due to immobility.

  • Early mobilisation
  • Compression stockings
  • Leg elevation when resting
🦴

Shoulder Pain

Affects 30-50% of stroke survivors.

  • Proper positioning
  • Support during transfers
  • Gentle range of motion

Stroke Rehabilitation FAQ

Answers to questions patients and families ask most frequently.

❓ How long will recovery take?
Recovery is different for everyone. Most rapid gains occur in the first 3-6 months, but improvement can continue for years with continued practice and therapy.
❓ Will my loved one walk again?
About 70% of stroke survivors regain independent walking ability. Factors include initial severity, motivation, and access to intensive rehabilitation.
❓ How often should therapy be done?
Research supports intensive therapy β€” at least 3 hours daily of task-specific practice during the subacute phase. Higher intensity = better outcomes.
❓ Can the brain heal after stroke?
Brain cells that die don't regenerate, but other areas can reorganise to take over lost functions through neuroplasticity. This is what rehabilitation trains.
❓ What can we do at home?
Follow the home programme provided by your physiotherapist. Consistency matters β€” short, frequent practice sessions are more effective than long, tiring sessions.
❓ When should we start physiotherapy?
As soon as the patient is medically stable β€” often within 24-48 hours of stroke. Early mobilisation prevents complications and accelerates recovery.

Free Resources for Patients & Families

Downloadable guides, exercise sheets, and checklists to support your recovery journey.

Need personalised guidance? Our stroke rehabilitation specialists are here to help.

Ready to Start Recovery?

Our stroke rehabilitation specialists are available across 15 centres in Delhi, Gurugram, Pune & Greater Noida.

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