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Mirror Therapy for Stroke Recovery: Does It Really Work?

11 Mar 2026 0 Comments

Mirror therapy is one of the most fascinating and well-researched techniques in stroke rehabilitation — yet most patients have never heard of it. In this article, we explain the science behind it, what the clinical evidence actually shows, and how to use it effectively at home.

What Is Mirror Therapy?

Mirror therapy involves placing a mirror vertically along the midline of your body, with your affected (weaker) arm hidden behind it. You then watch the reflection of your unaffected arm as it performs movements — creating the visual illusion that your affected arm is moving normally.

This sounds almost too simple to work. But the results in clinical trials have been consistently positive.

The Science: Why It Works

When you watch movement — even the movement of someone else's hand — your brain activates many of the same motor neurons that would fire if you were performing that movement. These are called mirror neurons.

In stroke rehabilitation, when the motor cortex is damaged, the neural pathways connecting "intention" to "movement" are disrupted. Mirror therapy bypasses this disruption by using visual feedback to activate motor circuits through the intact visual system — essentially "tricking" the brain into practicing movement even when the limb can't yet perform it.

Over time, this visual practice reinforces neuroplastic changes and helps re-establish motor pathways.

What Does the Research Say?

A 2016 Cochrane review (the gold standard in medical evidence) analyzed 57 trials with 1,838 patients and found that mirror therapy significantly improved:

  • Motor function in the affected arm and hand
  • Activities of daily living (getting dressed, eating, etc.)
  • Pain (particularly in complex regional pain syndrome post-stroke)

The effect was strongest when combined with other rehabilitation methods — not used in isolation.

How to Do Mirror Therapy at Home

What You Need

  • A mirror (at least 30 × 30 cm, mounted vertically) or a dedicated mirror therapy device
  • A flat table or surface
  • 15–20 minutes, 5 days per week

Step-by-Step Protocol

  1. Sit at a table with the mirror vertical, facing you, dividing your body into left and right halves.
  2. Place your affected hand behind the mirror — out of your line of sight.
  3. Look into the mirror at the reflection of your unaffected hand. You should see what appears to be two normal hands.
  4. Perform slow, deliberate movements with your unaffected hand: open and close the fist, extend each finger, rotate the wrist. Focus intently on the reflection.
  5. Try to move the affected hand simultaneously — even if no movement occurs, the intention is important.
  6. Practice for 15–20 minutes per session.

Common Movements to Practice

  • Finger extension and flexion (opening and closing)
  • Thumb-to-finger pinch movements
  • Wrist flexion and extension
  • Forearm pronation and supination (turning palm up/down)

Combining Mirror Therapy With Other Tools

Mirror therapy is most powerful as part of a combined approach:

Tool How It Complements Mirror Therapy
Rehabilitation Glove (C12 / E12E) Adds physical movement to the visual stimulus — active mode particularly powerful
TENS Electrical Stimulation Reduces spasticity before sessions, making movement easier
Functional Tasks Transfers gains from mirror practice to real-world use

A strong daily routine: TENS (10 min) → Rehabilitation Glove (25 min) → Mirror Therapy (15 min) → Functional Practice (10 min)

Who Should NOT Use Mirror Therapy

  • Patients with significant visual impairment or neglect (inability to process one side of the visual field)
  • Patients who experience increased pain or discomfort during sessions (stop and consult your therapist)
  • Cognitive impairment that prevents understanding of the mirror setup

Getting Started

Syrebo's Smart Mirror Therapy Device is designed for home use — it provides a stable, purpose-built setup with the correct mirror dimensions for effective therapy. Paired with a rehabilitation glove, it creates a clinically-grounded home rehabilitation system.

Questions? Email us at service@syrebocare.com.

Sample Image Gallery

From Hospitals to Communities & Home

Syrebo home hand rehabilitation robot helps users to move and re-learn, so as to improve hand mobility and accelerate the process of hand ehabilitation from three levels of nerves, brain and muscles.
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