Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation
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Arch Phys Med Rehabil · May 2008
Poor sleep quality and changes in objectively recorded sleep after traumatic brain injury: a preliminary study.
To evaluate changes in sleep quality and objectively assessed sleep parameters after traumatic brain injury (TBI) and to investigate the relationship between such changes and mood state and injury characteristics. ⋯ The findings contribute to the growing body of evidence that sleep is involved in the physiologic processes underlying neural recovery. The association between anxiety and depression and the observed changes in sleep in TBI patients warrants further examination to determine whether a causative relationship exists.
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A 23-year-old man presented to our sports medicine clinic with a history of nontraumatic left anterior chest pain. Prior to presentation, a magnetic resonance image (MRI) had been performed that showed increased signal in the soft tissues around the sternoclavicular joint, primarily in the pectoralis major, and a small amount of fluid in the joint, thought possibly consistent with sympathetic effusion from a muscle tear. On examination, the patient was toxic appearing and had severe pain with virtually any left upper-extremity movement and with walking. ⋯ No predisposing factor for this infection was found. Septic sternoclavicular joint is rare, accounting for 1% of all septic joints. Infection or other unusual pathology should be suspected when clinical findings are not consistent with simple musculoskeletal injury.
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Arch Phys Med Rehabil · May 2008
The effect of effortful swallow on pharyngeal manometric measurements during saliva and water swallowing in healthy participants.
To evaluate the effect of effortful swallow on pharyngeal manometric pressure measurements during saliva and water swallowing. ⋯ The results indicate that the effect of effortful swallow on pharyngeal peak pressure measurement is not altered by bolus type (saliva vs water). However, this is not the case for nadir pressure measurements in the UES, which were significantly lower in effortful saliva swallows than in effortful water swallows.