Home/Our Results/Research/Johns Hopkins Introduces NeuroAnimation Into the Acute Stroke Unit, Showing Immersive Movement Engagement Is Safe and Feasible From Day One

Johns Hopkins Introduces NeuroAnimation Into the Acute Stroke Unit, Showing Immersive Movement Engagement Is Safe and Feasible From Day One

Johns Hopkins Introduces NeuroAnimation Into the Acute Stroke Unit, Showing Immersive Movement Engagement Is Safe and Feasible From Day One
neurons
FacebookXLinkedIn

A clinical program at Johns Hopkins Hospital demonstrating early deployment of enriched movement engagement in the most demanding inpatient setting.

Study Context

Johns Hopkins School of Medicine introduced NeuroAnimation directly into the acute stroke unit, providing an additional hour of enriched movement engagement per day beginning within the first days of stroke onset. The program was designed to complement conventional care and specifically engage in the early neuroplasticity window, when the brain is most receptive to adaptive movement.

The Evidence

The study demonstrated the feasibility and safety of deploying NeuroAnimation in the acute inpatient stroke setting. Delivering an additional hour of high-intensity, enriched movement engagement per day, on top of standard care, was shown to be practical within existing clinical workflows and well-accepted by participants in the acute phase.

Key Finding

Day 1

Immersive movement engagement safely initiated within the first days of acute stroke admission at Johns Hopkins Hospital

What The Research Shows

  • Safe and feasible in the acute inpatient setting, one of the most demanding environments for introducing wellness programs
  • Delivers an additional hour of enriched, neuroplasticity-targeted movement engagement per day
  • Designed to complement existing programs without disrupting medical care
  • Engages the early neuroplasticity window, when research suggests the brain is most receptive to adaptive movement
neurons
bg gradient
Johns Hopkins Acute Stroke Unit Program Study

What This May Mean For You

This work demonstrates that NeuroAnimation can be introduced from the very first days after stroke. Starting enriched movement engagement during the period of highest natural neuroplasticity may offer advantages that cannot be replicated at a later stage.

neurons
bg gradient
Take The Next Step

Similar topics

Related Case Studies

Real case studies that support brain health, improved brain function, and greater mental clarity across a range of neurological conditions.

A Meta-Analysis of 467 Stroke Trials and 25,373 Participants Finds Standard Physical Approaches Have Limited Effect Beyond Natural Recovery image
Research

A Meta-Analysis of 467 Stroke Trials and 25,373 Participants Finds Standard Physical Approaches Have Limited Effect Beyond Natural Recovery

Published in PLOS ONE, this is one of the largest evidence reviews in stroke program resea

Discover More
Johns Hopkins Research Finds That Task-Specific Training May Not Adequately Engage the Post-Stroke Neuroplasticity Window image
Research

Johns Hopkins Research Finds That Task-Specific Training May Not Adequately Engage the Post-Stroke Neuroplasticity Window

Published by Johns Hopkins, this study examines whether the conventional approach fully us

Discover More
Cochrane Systematic Review Finds Only Low-to-Moderate Evidence That Repetitive Task Training Supports Upper Limb Progress After Stroke image
Research

Cochrane Systematic Review Finds Only Low-to-Moderate Evidence That Repetitive Task Training Supports Upper Limb Progress After Stroke

The Cochrane Collaboration is the gold standard for systematic medical evidence review. St

Discover More