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Table 1 Clinical and demographic characteristics

From: Facilitation of corticospinal excitability by virtual reality exercise following anodal transcranial direct current stimulation in healthy volunteers and subacute stroke subjects

Patient

Sex

Age

Weeks since onset

Etiology

Site of lesion

FIM

MBI

FMS (upper extremity)

1

M

38

5

Infarction

Cerebellum, pons

111

60

52

2

M

74

3

Infarction

Lt. pons

106

59

53

3

M

52

4

Infarction

Lt. MCA (subcortical)

101

97

55

4

M

66

6

Hemorrhage

Rt. BG (subcortical)

103

81

53

5

M

65

5

Infarction

Rt. pons

106

80

60

6

M

54

7

Hemorrhage

Lt. BG (subcortical)

99

83

56

7

F

74

5

Infarction

Lt. PICA (subcortical)

111

81

54

8

M

71

6

Hemorrhage

Rt. BG (subcortical)

102

74

50

9

F

47

8

Infarction

Rt. ACA (cortical)

106

82

62

10

F

56

4

Hemorrhage

Lt. MCA (cortical)

105

74

54

11

M

59

5

Infarction

Rt. BG (subcortical)

112

89

58

12

M

52

3

Infarction

Rt. MCA (subcortical)

106

81

58

13

F

62

5

Hemorrhage

Lt. MCA (subcortical)

108

76

56

14

M

57

4

Infarction

Rt. MCA (cortical)

122

88

57

15

M

64

4

Hemorrhage

Lt. BG (subcortical)

116

83

55

  1. Rt, right; Lt, left; MCA, middle cerebral artery; BG, basal ganglia; PICA, posterior inferior cerebellar artery; ACA, anterior cerebral artery; FIM, functional independence measure; MBI, modified barthel index; FMS, Fugl-Meyer upper extremity assessment score.