DALLAS, April 7, 2022 — Stroke survivors who practiced a seated form of Tai Chi had equal or greater improvement in hand and arm strength, shoulder range of motion, balance control, symptoms of ...
Many stroke survivors are deterred from participating in rehabilitation therapy due to a lack of physical stability or full use of the arms. But the practice of a seated form of tai chi results in a ...
A seated form of a traditional martial art can help stroke survivors regain strength and balance and help relieve depression symptoms as well as or better than standard post-stroke exercise programs, ...
Sitting tai chi provides stroke survivors with recovery benefits similar to those achieved with standard rehabilitation, a new study finds. Tai chi involves a series of slow movements of the hands, ...
ARLINGTON, Va. — An exercise that seeks to combine traditional Tai Chi Chuan with sitting has caught on for members of the Fort Benning Soldier Recovery Unit (SRU) in Georgia. The SRU created the ...
SUNSET— Tyrone Aranda is applying a principle he was taught early on while learning martial arts — if you learn something, you give it back. After studying karate for 35 years, Aranda is now giving ...
Researchers have compared the effects of tai chi to leg strengthening exercises (a physical therapy called 'lower extremity training,' or LET) in reducing falls. After six months of training, people ...