Stroke Recovery Support

A stroke can change life in a single moment. Even after the hospital care is done, the fear often stays. You may be scared it will happen again. You may feel frustrated because recovery is slower than you expected. Simple tasks can feel hard. Fatigue can be overwhelming. Emotions can swing fast, and it can feel like your body is not fully yours yet.

Families carry their own fear too. You want to help, but you do not always know what is safe, what is normal, and what needs urgent attention. You may feel stuck between medical appointments and day to day reality.

At Optimal Health Group, we provide BICOM bioresonance in Singapore as a gentle, non invasive complementary option for post stroke support and aftercare. Our approach is conservative and comfort led. We focus on regulation, recovery stability, sleep, stress load, circulation support patterns, and day to day function alongside rehabilitation and medical follow up.

Why recovery can feel so hard

A stroke is a brain circulation event

Even after the acute danger passes, the body and nervous system can take time to stabilise.

Fatigue is real and common

Many people feel drained for months, even when they are trying their best.

Stress and poor sleep slow recovery

When the system stays on high alert, progress can feel inconsistent.

Confidence drops after a major event

Fear of falling, fear of another stroke, and frustration can make the body feel tense and reactive.

Recovery is not just physical.

Mood, focus, and emotional stability often need support too.

Bottom line: You are not weak if recovery is slow. Many people need steady support to rebuild stability and confidence.

How we can help

Think of the BICOM as a tool that helps us do two things.
(1) Identify what is most linked to your symptom pattern
(2) Support regulation so you feel more stable over time

We map your pattern

We start with what daily life looks like now. Fatigue, sleep disruption, dizziness, weakness, stiffness, speech or swallowing strain where relevant, mood changes, brain fog, anxiety, and recovery after activity. We also look at stress load and what makes symptoms spike. During sessions, we use gentle biofeedback style signals to guide a personalised support approach so we focus on what matters most to your day to day function.

We prioritise the biggest stability gaps first

Post stroke support needs conservative pacing. We focus on the priorities that most influence daily stability first, commonly sleep consistency, stress response, circulation support patterns, comfort and tension patterns, and pacing so you do not crash.

We run a personalised calming and resilience support program

Sessions are designed to support regulation so your nervous system can settle and recovery feels more possible. The goal is steadier sleep, calmer stress response, improved day to day comfort, better energy stability, and more confidence in routine activities.

We track what changes and refine the plan

We monitor practical outcomes: sleep consistency, fatigue level, comfort and mobility tolerance, dizziness patterns where present, mood stability, focus and clarity, and how you recover after rehab or daily activity. Then we adjust based on what improves, not a fixed script.

Small changes that make results stick

Bottom line: If you are recovering from a stroke and you want gentle support to feel steadier day to day, start with a Stroke Recovery Support Assessment. You will leave with clarity on priorities and a conservative plan that feels manageable.

What to expect

1

First visit

Consultation plus baseline (current function, fatigue, sleep, mood, rehab context), then a conservative plan built around priorities

2

Session feel

Non invasive and comfortable, paced gently for recovery

3

After session

Practical next steps and what to track between visits

4

Follow ups

Quick checkpoints to review stability markers and refine priorities

Stroke Recovery Support

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this for someone who just had a stroke, or long after?
It can be relevant at different stages, but stroke is always a medical emergency. We focus on aftercare and recovery support alongside your doctor and rehabilitation plan.
No. We provide complementary support alongside medical follow up and rehabilitation.
Yes. Post stroke fatigue is very common. We focus on sleep consistency, pacing, and stress regulation to support steadier recovery.
Many people feel this fear. We support calmness and nervous system regulation so your body feels less stuck in high alert.
Recovery often happens in waves. Sleep disruption, stress, and doing too much on a good day can lead to a crash. We help you build a plan that stabilises your routine and recovery.
Some people experience these symptoms during recovery. We can support overall stability and comfort, but new or worsening symptoms should always be assessed medically.
We review your current symptoms, daily function, rehab routine, sleep, stress load, and what you are most worried about. Then we set priorities and start with a conservative plan.
Yes. Family support matters. We can help caregivers understand pacing, routines, and what to track so the home environment feels calmer and more structured.
you have sudden weakness, facial droop, speech difficulty, severe headache, chest pain, fainting, new confusion, sudden vision changes, or any rapidly worsening symptoms, seek urgent medical attention immediately.

Explore related support areas

Safety and compliance note

Our services are complementary wellness support. They are intended to support regulation, comfort, and day to day functioning and may help with goals such as sleep quality, stress resilience, comfort, and recovery stability.

We do not provide medical diagnosis and our services are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease. Stroke symptoms require urgent medical attention. If you suspect a stroke or have sudden neurological symptoms, call emergency services immediately.