Physical medicine and rehabilitation clinics of North America
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Quantitative sensory testing is a reliable way of assessing large and small sensory nerve fiber function. Sensory deficits may be quantified and the data used in parametric statistical analysis in research studies and drug trials. It is an important addition to the neurophysiologic armamentarium, because conventional sensory nerve conduction tests only the large fibers. ⋯ The data in the literature do not allow conclusions regarding the superiority of any QST instruments. The future of QST is promising; however, many factors can affect QST results. As is true for other neurophysiologic tests, QST is susceptible to many extraneous factors and to misuse when not properly interpreted by the clinician.
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Phys Med Rehabil Clin N Am · Feb 2003
ReviewShould the injured and intact hemispheres be treated differently during the early phases of physical restorative therapy in experimental stroke or parkinsonism?
Over a century ago the intact cortex was proposed to contribute to recovery from unilateral brain injury, but its possible role in functional outcome has become more appreciated in recent years as a result of anatomic, metabolic and behavioral studies. Although use of the contralesional limb is naturally impaired after sensorimotor cortex injury, neural and astrocytic events in the intact hemisphere may give rise to, and may be influenced by, an enhanced ability to compensate for lost motor function. The debate is still open as to whether the neural changes are generally compensatory in nature, with activity in the homotopic cortex leading to greater capability in the nonimpaired limb, or whether they are actually a matter of reorganization in the homotopic cortex leading to connections to denervated targets in the opposite hemisphere, thus allowing the homotopic cortex to control motor programs there. ⋯ Neural events in the injured hemisphere can be affected by behavior differently than the neural events in the intact hemisphere. Different therapeutic strategies might well be used on opposing limbs at different times after unilateral sensorimotor cortex injury to optimize recovery (and, indeed, to avoid exaggerating the insult). Finally, the details of reorganization in both hemispheres differ greatly depending on the type of brain injury sustained (eg, in stroke versus Parkinson's disease), suggesting that an approach that considers the role of both hemispheres is likely to be beneficial in research on a broad variety of brain pathologies.
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Phys Med Rehabil Clin N Am · Feb 2003
ReviewNeuromuscular electrical stimulation for motor relearning in hemiparesis.
Neuromuscular electrical stimulation may have an important role in improving the motor function of stroke survivors. Active, repetitive movement training mediated by transcutaneous cyclic and EMG-triggered NMES may facilitate the motor recovery of stroke survivors. Multicenter, double-blinded, randomized clinical trials should be pursued to confirm the motor-relearning effects of transcutaneous NMES and to define appropriate prescriptive specifications. ⋯ Finally, consumers will direct future developments. In the present health care environment, where cost has become an overwhelming factor in the development and implementation of new technology, the consumer will become one of technology's greatest advocates. The usual drive toward greater complexity will be tempered by the practical issues of clinical implementation, where patient acceptance is often a function of a tenuous balance between the burden or cost associated with using a system and the system's impact on the user's life.
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Phys Med Rehabil Clin N Am · Feb 2003
ReviewLumbar epidural steroid injections in the patient with lumbar spinal stenosis.
Epidural steroid injections seem to be a useful component of a comprehensive and functionally oriented rehabilitation program for the patient with LSS. Review of the literature indicates the injections seem to be effective and are safe when performed with proper technique.
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This article reviews the history, classification, and pathoanatomy of lumbar spinal stenosis. An understanding of the pathoanatomy of lumbar spinal stenosis is essential for the clinician to treat the patient with clinically symptomatic lumbar spinal stenosis more effectively.