• Preventive medicine · Sep 2023

    Diagnosis of motor function injury based on near-infrared spectroscopy brain imaging (fNIRS) technology.

    • Cheng Peng and Ziyi Wang.
    • School of Rehabilitation Medicine, Jiangsu Vocational College Of Medicine, Yancheng, Jiangsu 224000, China. Electronic address: pengcheng0825@sina.com.
    • Prev Med. 2023 Sep 1; 174: 107641107641.

    AbstractMost clinical stroke patients may have difficulty moving, affecting their self-care ability and quality of life, and causing serious interference with the normal life and work of other family members. At present, in clinical literature, researchers provide functional training for patients with motor disorders through repeated and effective training, which can ultimately effectively promote the recovery of limb function. Therefore, the near-infrared spectroscopy imaging technology (fNIRS) used in this study combines the diagnosis of sports injury with the mechanism of brain function. FNIRS technology has many advantages, such as fast, and non-invasive, and has shown great value in detecting brain activity. Therefore, it has become a promising method in the biomedical field, especially in the field of brain science. Based on the clinical effects of sports injury treatment, fNIRS technology is used to detect the hemodynamic changes of hemoglobin circulation in the patient's brain tissue during training, and to detect the brain activity mechanism in the exercise mechanism, providing a basis for the clinical application of this method.Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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