Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation
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Time to return to work following hand burns was studied in 70 patients in relation to several variables: 1. total body surface area (TBSA) burned; 2. hand burned; 3. grafting; 4. patient age; 5. occupational category. Return to work data were also compared by meta-analysis to data in prior reports on return to work in nonburn hand injuries. ⋯ The best predictor of time to return to work was TBSA burned, followed by "grafting" and "hand burned." No significant differences or predictors were found for patient age, occupational category, or between nonburn hand trauma patients in prior reports. Conclusions are drawn concerning the usefulness of these results in terms of case management and economic impact in hand-burn injuries.
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Arch Phys Med Rehabil · Apr 1986
Case ReportsProsthetic rehabilitation in unilateral high above-elbow amputation and brachial plexus lesion: case report.
Rehabilitation in persons with high above-elbow amputation presents a considerable prosthetic problem, especially in those who also have brachial plexus lesion. A case is reported of a patient having left above-elbow amputation and left brachial plexus lesion who was successfully fitted with a hybrid prosthesis with a myoelectric hand.
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Based on the author's experience with more than 20 cases of immobilization hypercalcemia following spinal cord injury, current concepts of this condition are presented. Symptoms may be mild or severe: laboratory findings are essential for differential diagnosis in older individuals, in whom preinjury Paget's disease and mild primary hyperparathyroidism must be ruled out. Most cases of immobilization hypercalcemia are seen in adolescent boys following recent spinal cord injury. ⋯ A preinjury history of large ingestion of milk and/or extreme exposure to sunshine may also be contributory factors. Therapy includes vigorous hydration, saline infusions and diuretics, calcitonin, and steroids. The clinical course, without treatment, may be prolonged to 14 months, but the condition is always self-limiting.
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Arch Phys Med Rehabil · Nov 1985
Comparative StudyChronic pain in spinal cord injury: comparison between inpatients and outpatients.
Chronic pain is a common clinical finding in spinal cord injury (SCI), with a reported incidence of between 45% and 90%. This figure was obtained by using nonstandardized pain evaluation and for mostly inpatient populations. Because of the shortcomings of previous investigations and the wide range of reported incidence, a study was conducted using self-rating pain measurement, an activity check list, and a drug-use rating scale. ⋯ Statistical analysis showed an incidence of chronic pain and decreased activity of 60% among inpatients and of 16.6% in outpatients. The drug-use rating scale was also significantly higher among inpatients while outpatients had a higher level of physical activity than inpatients. Whether these differences are causally related to the patient's hospitalization is difficult to determine.