Why Balance Matters So Much After Stroke
A stroke happens when blood flow to part of the brain is cut off, damaging the cells that control movement, coordination, and sensation. About 80% of stroke survivors experience some degree of physical impairment, and balance problems are among the most common.
Poor balance isn't just uncomfortable — it leads directly to falls, fractures, loss of independence, and long-term disability. It's one of the main reasons stroke survivors end up in long-term care rather than returning home.
Exercise is widely recognized as a key part of stroke rehabilitation. But until now, there has been no clear answer to a simple question: how much exercise, exactly, and what kind?
One Size Doesn't Fit All Exercise Programs
For years, rehabilitation programs have prescribed exercise in broadly different amounts. Some lasted 20 minutes a session. Others ran 90 minutes. Some met twice a week, others daily. The result was a patchwork of programs that made it nearly impossible to compare outcomes.
But here's the twist: a research team at Frontiers in Medicine used a sophisticated statistical approach to cut through that noise. They converted all exercise programs from different studies into a single unit — METs-min/week (a measure that combines exercise intensity and time per week) — and then mapped those doses against how much balance improved.
How Exercise Rewires the Brain
After a stroke, the brain isn't simply broken in a fixed way. It has a remarkable ability to reroute and rebuild connections — a property called neuroplasticity. Exercise acts like a fertilizer for this process.
When stroke survivors move their bodies regularly, blood flow to the brain increases. New neural pathways form around damaged areas. Balance-specific exercises also directly train the cerebellum (the part of the brain that coordinates movement), gradually teaching it to compensate for what was lost.
Think of it like a detour on a highway. The main road is damaged, but with enough traffic and time, alternate routes get paved and widened until the detour becomes reliable. Exercise helps pave those detours.
Researchers analyzed 42 randomized controlled trials — the gold standard in medical research — involving stroke survivors of various ages and recovery stages. They used Bayesian statistics (a method that combines prior evidence with new data) to model the dose-response relationship across different exercise types.
The analysis covered aerobic exercise, resistance training, water-based exercise, balance training, Chinese exercises like tai chi, and high-intensity interval training (HIIT).
The Sweet Spot That Changes Everything
The results showed that the relationship between exercise dose and balance improvement is not a straight line. Benefits increase with more exercise — up to a point.
The minimum effective dose was approximately 270 METs-min/week. To put that in real-world terms, that's roughly 150 minutes of moderate-intensity walking spread across a week. Below that threshold, measurable balance improvement became unreliable.
The peak benefit zone was around 1,200 METs-min/week — equivalent to roughly 3 to 5 sessions of moderate exercise per week. Beyond that peak, additional exercise appeared to produce diminishing returns, and at very high doses, gains actually reversed.
This doesn't mean stroke survivors should push harder — it means smarter, structured programs may matter more than sheer volume.
Not All Exercise Works the Same Way
The type of exercise also mattered. Resistance training (weight exercises and muscle strengthening) showed the largest average benefit for balance. Water-based exercise showed strong results at higher doses. Aerobic exercise was effective at moderate doses. Tai chi and other Chinese movement practices showed steady positive effects throughout the evidence-supported range.
Notably, HIIT — often promoted for cardiovascular benefits — showed small and uncertain effects on balance specifically, and was not recommended as a first-line option for post-stroke balance recovery.
If you or someone you love is recovering from a stroke, this research supports a concrete ask: talk to your rehabilitation team about weekly exercise targets, not just exercise type. Ask how your current program measures up to the 270 METs-min/week minimum threshold. If resistance training or water-based exercise is feasible, there is now stronger evidence that these may offer particular benefits for balance.
A Few Honest Caveats
Most studies in this review were conducted in clinical settings with supervised exercise, which may not reflect what happens when survivors try to exercise independently at home. The evidence for very high exercise doses was sparse, making those estimates less reliable. Individual factors — stroke severity, age, mobility — also affect how much someone can safely exercise.
This review provides the most detailed dose-response map yet for exercise and post-stroke balance. The next step is translating these findings into standardized rehabilitation protocols that clinicians can actually prescribe. Researchers are calling for future trials that test specific dose targets directly — comparing, for example, a 270 METs-min/week program against a 600 METs-min/week program — to verify these predictions in real-world settings. The hope is that stroke rehabilitation programs worldwide will eventually move from vague recommendations to precise, personalized prescriptions.