This article defines Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine (PRM) as the medical specialty focused on improving and restoring functional ability and quality of life for individuals with physical impairments or disabilities affecting the nervous, musculoskeletal, cardiopulmonary, or other body systems. PRM encompasses diagnosis, medical management, and coordination of rehabilitation interventions including physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech-language therapy, prosthetics and orthotics, and assistive technology. Core features: (1) functional assessment (measuring activities of daily living – ADLs, mobility, communication, cognition, participation), (2) goal setting (patient-centred, measurable, time-limited functional outcomes), (3) multidisciplinary team approach (physiatrist, physiotherapist, occupational therapist, speech therapist, rehabilitation nurse, psychologist, social worker), (4) therapeutic interventions (therapeutic exercise, neurodevelopmental techniques, balance training, gait re-education, task-specific training), (5) adaptive equipment and environmental modifications (wheelchairs, walkers, home ramps, bathroom grab bars). The article addresses: stated objectives of PRM; key concepts including neuroplasticity, activity limitation, participation restriction, and task-oriented training; core mechanisms such as constraint-induced movement therapy, locomotor training, and botulinum toxin for spasticity; international comparisons and debated issues (intensity of rehabilitation, early mobilisation, rehabilitation outcome measurement); summary and emerging trends (robotic exoskeletons, virtual reality rehabilitation, telerehabilitation); and a Q&A section.
This article describes physical and rehabilitation medicine without endorsing specific protocols. Objectives commonly cited: maximising independence and quality of life for individuals with disabling conditions, reducing caregiver burden, preventing secondary complications (contractures, pressure injuries, falls, deconditioning), facilitating community reintegration, and reducing long-term healthcare costs. The article notes that PRM serves diverse populations including those with stroke, spinal cord conditions, traumatic brain injury, amputation, joint replacement, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s disease, and persistent musculoskeletal discomfort.
Key terminology:
International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF, WHO): Framework for describing functioning and disability at body functions/structures, activities, and participation levels, considering environmental and personal factors.
Rehabilitation team members and roles:
Rehabilitation settings (by intensity):
Evidence-based interventions (selected):
Outcome measurement in rehabilitation:
International rehabilitation systems:
| Country/Region | Inpatient rehabilitation beds/100,000 | Dominant payment model | Typical length of stay (stroke) |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 20-25 | Fee-for-service (Medicare IRF criteria) | 12-18 days |
| Germany | 30-40 | DRG-based with rehabilitation add-ons | 20-30 days (post-acute) |
| United Kingdom | 15-20 | NHS (rationed) | 7-14 days (early supported discharge) |
| Canada | 15-25 | Medicare (provincial) | 20-30 days |
| Japan | 40-50 (highest, due to ageing) | Long-term care insurance + health insurance | 60-90 days |
Debated issues:
Summary: Physical and rehabilitation medicine improves function for individuals with disabling conditions through multidisciplinary goal-oriented interventions. Constraint-induced movement therapy (post-stroke) and locomotor training (spinal cord injury, stroke) are evidence-based. Early mobilisation improves outcomes. Higher therapy intensity is associated with better outcomes. Access disparities exist.
Emerging trends:
Q1: How long after a stroke should rehabilitation begin?
A: As soon as medically stable (typically within 24-48 hours). Very early mobilisation (within 24 hours) is generally safe and beneficial, but avoid sitting on the edge of the bed if blood pressure control is compromised. Intensive rehabilitation continues for months to years.
Q2: What is the role of botulinum toxin in rehabilitation medicine?
A: Botulinum toxin type A is injected into overactive muscles to reduce focal spasticity (e.g., elbow flexors, ankle plantar flexors) for 2-4 months. Reduces tone, improves passive range of motion, reduces pain, and facilitates stretching and splinting. It does not replace active task practice but makes it easier.
Q3: Can individuals with complete spinal cord injury walk again?
A: For complete SCI (no motor or sensory function below the level of injury), volitional walking is not restored. However, exoskeletons and functional electrical stimulation (FES) cycling allow standing and walking with assistance. Incomplete SCI (some preserved function) benefit from locomotor training to improve walking ability.
Q4: How is spasticity distinguished from contracture, and how are they managed?
A: Spasticity is velocity-dependent increase in tone (resistance to rapid stretch). Contracture is fixed shortening of muscle or joint capsule (resistance persists regardless of stretch speed). Spasticity is treated with stretching, splinting, and medications/injections. Contracture requires prolonged stretching, serial casting, or surgical release.
https://www.who.int/classifications/icf/
https://www.aapmr.org/ (American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation)
https://www.mskcc.org/rehabilitation
https://www.cochrane.org/evidence/rehabilitation
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